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Old 05-04-2014, 10:30 AM   #11 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by redpoint5 View Post
What do you run?

I use 10W-40 synthetic in the motorcycle and 10W-30 synthetic in the cars. It was my wild guess as to the right balance of fuel economy and long term engine protection, given my extended drain intervals.
I always try to run 5w-40 in the suburban most of the year. If I do a spring time oil change I will usually run 10w-30.
In the cars I usually run 5w or 10w-30. Our hyundai that has a lot of miles calls for 5w-20.
In the air cooled machines I run10w-40 bike oil.
Usually synthetic or blend.

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Old 05-04-2014, 09:50 PM   #12 (permalink)
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I was reading something the other day that the larger the weight range was the more likely it was to sheer or loose that weight as the oil approaches the end of its life. So if you needed a 40 weight oil you were better off to buy a 20w50 vs a 5w40 or something to that effect.

The second example they gave was ow20 vs 5w20. They said the 5w20 would still hold its 20 weight at the end of its cycle where the 0w would drift to like a 15 or even 10 weight oil at operating temperature.
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Old 05-04-2014, 10:20 PM   #13 (permalink)
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I heard that long ago and have only used 10-30 and 5-30 since. Once I use up all my 10-30 I'll go with 5-30 year around.
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Old 05-06-2014, 12:09 PM   #14 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cobb View Post
I was reading something the other day that the larger the weight range was the more likely it was to sheer or loose that weight as the oil approaches the end of its life. So if you needed a 40 weight oil you were better off to buy a 20w50 vs a 5w40 or something to that effect.

The second example they gave was ow20 vs 5w20. They said the 5w20 would still hold its 20 weight at the end of its cycle where the 0w would drift to like a 15 or even 10 weight oil at operating temperature.
I think that's only true for non-synthetic oils. Synthetic oil comes with that viscosity from the base stock, while conventional oil starts with a lower viscosity index, has VI improvers added, and then those get burned off and the oil thins out. I use non-synthetic and change slightly more often, my 1ZZ engine would burn too much of it between changes if I tried to extend intervals.

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