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My reason for asking is that since engine oils get better and better with advancing technology and therefore a modern 0w20 oil should IN THEORY be better ON ALL counts compared to a DINOsaur like the mineral 20w50 (a favourite for "classic" engines).
Sorry to start an oil thread but I have a niggling question I would like your input on. Has anyone here tried using very thin oils in their engines? I mean 10w30 and below, I am especially interested to know about the 5w20 and 0w20 weight oils? All the opinions seem to tell you not to do this, but I want to know if you have tried it? My reason for asking is that since engine oils get better and better with advancing technology and therefore a modern 0w20 oil should IN THEORY be better ON ALL counts compared to a DINOsaur like the mineral 20w50 (a favourite for "classic" engines).
Seems for once we are all in agreement on this one Use the manufacturer's recommended weight . Dusty
I thought it was a joke being played on me to have 0w40 as the recommended oil for my Mercedes...0wanything?Does that really exist?Put a real crimp in my: Rotella in EVERYTHING, life plan!I'm a huge believer in manufacturer recommendations these days. Conventional wisdom no longer applies and there are simply too many things going on that I don't know about and too many internal dependancies that slip through the cracks. NPI...Todd.
I run Mobil 0w-40 in everything I own that doesn't have a wet clutch. So 4 out of 5 bikes including the V11 and 4 cars.The upper viscosity you use depends entirely on what the temp range your bike will operate in. Every operating manual I have seen gives a list of generally 4 or 5 different viscosity oils depending on the Ambient temps expected.Personally the exception for me is the later Guzzi 8 valve engines and their requirement for 60 weight oil. Sometimes even the designers just don't understand oils. Don't worry too much about the XXw number just go for the lowest number you can get. Its only relevant for cold starts and when the engine isn't up to operating temp and that's when you want the lowest viscosity you can get anyway because as we all know a zero weight oil at room temp is still more viscous than a 40 weight at engine operating temp.BTW this info is for full synthetic oils.Ciao
>>Flow is improved but isn't there a wear issue regarding cold starts that would argue that lower isn't necessarily better?<<Even 0W- oils are too viscous when cold. The key to understanding this is knowing that the first number xW- and the second number-xx are different scales and refer to different things. In reality, if the two numbers referred to viscosity, you would see a 20W-50 referred to as something like a 350W-50, indicating that at cold start, the oil is very thick. Even a 0W-50 would be referred to as something like a 200W-50 using the same scales. In broad terms, if you could get a stable 00000W-XX oil, your engine would start easily in cold weather, have great oil flow straight away and wear would be minimised.Stephen
Thanks for the replies!If I understand correctly, when you make a multigrade Dino oil you start out with the lower number and then add viscosity improvers to achieve the higher number, so for example a 20w50 oil is actually 20 oil with viscosity improvers added to make it a 50 oil at operating temp. These improvers wear out so after a while your oil turns into 20w40, 20w30 and in the end 20w20. With synthetics it is the opposite, it is the higher number that is the base oil, so a 20w50 is a 50 oil with additives to make it thinner at room temp. Synthetics also do not wear out and therefore will not change their viscosity over time like a Dino oil. So yes, I also understand that if you are dealing with synthetics (not Dino) oils then you want the lowest possible number in front, to avoid cold start lubrication problems. So a 5w50 is always preferable to 20w50 and so on.
With synthetics it is the opposite, it is the higher number that is the base oil, so a 20w50 is a 50 oil with additives to make it thinner at room temp. Synthetics also do not wear out and therefore will not change their viscosity over time like a Dino oil.
Actually No. A full synth oil of 0W-40 is a Zero weight oil at...
I made the mistake of trying to run my LM2 on 10w/40 after renovating it. Luckily no damage was done but the warning sign was occasional oil light flickering at idle. I now use Valvoline VR1 20w/50 Racing (mineral) Oil, which actually isnt a 'race' oil but denotes it's properties...'high zinc / phosphorus providing extreme wear protection, including flat tappet applications'.I'd definitely use whatever oil MG recommend for the bike you've got.
Wait, what... it's weightless?Me? I run straight no-weight in my Heemi!My head hurts.Todd.
I think this warrants discussionIf it happened to an engine I built, I wouldn't contemplate thicker oil, better, maybe, but something very wrong here.Funny thing I learnt something cos of thisI really believed my 78 LM was specced 10/40 from beginning, have pretty much always kept to that (synth from about 82)Looked up every book I have, was apparently 10/50, same for all BB pushrod till 1100Sp, that was 5/50, markets may differ, none of my books mention tempsOther than that I have nothing to offer but would use 0/40 or 5/50 and be scared if oil light flickered, not of the oil but of impending shrapnel.
If your LM2 was putting on the oil light at idle with a 10-40 oil then it wasn't an issue with the oil its an issue with the engine or oil system but probably not a critical one.The LOP light flickering at idle isn't a major issue anyway. Every time I have seen this if you increase the idle a couple of hundred rpm it goes out. Just because the light is flickering doesn't mean you have zero oil pressure it means you have reached the switch threshold ( around 2.5psi on a Ducati which uses the same switch) that's more than adequate pressure at idle.Ciao