Originally posted by: Eli
To answer your question, we need to know a little bit more information, like where you live.. for starters.
Let me take this opportunity to repeat myself.Originally posted by: andylawcc
Originally posted by: Eli
To answer your question, we need to know a little bit more information, like where you live.. for starters.
Toyota 1.8 EFI gasoline 4 banger . Horsepower: 105. Compression Ratio: 10.0:1
I believe the user manual recommends 10w-30
I currently living in Missouri. It has HOT summer and snowing winter.
right now I bought a 5Quart jug of 5W-30 Pennzoil and 10W-30.
I have been using 10w the whole time, and I did a 50:50 mixing for my last oil change just for fun.
I know it probably won't make a difference,
but doesn't less viscous means less friction(and protection)?
Originally posted by: Marlin1975
I use Mobil 10W30 year round. I also, unless it requires soemthing different, use the same thing in all my customers cars/trucks.
Originally posted by: andylawcc
Originally posted by: Eli
To answer your question, we need to know a little bit more information, like where you live.. for starters.
Toyota 1.8 EFI gasoline 4 banger . Horsepower: 105. Compression Ratio: 10.0:1
I believe the user manual recommends 10w-30
I currently living in Missouri. It has HOT summer and snowing winter.
right now I bought a 5Quart jug of 5W-30 Pennzoil and 10W-30.
I have been using 10w the whole time, and I did a 50:50 mixing for my last oil change just for fun.
I know it probably won't make a difference,
but doesn't less viscous means less friction(and protection)?
Lower viscosity usually means less protection, but friction will also decrease, resulting in a (very slight, almost certainly negligable) MPG improvement. This is why Honda "recommends" xW-20 oils. Adequate? Perhaps. Ideal? Certainly not, IMO.Originally posted by: andylawcc
Originally posted by: Marlin1975
I use Mobil 10W30 year round. I also, unless it requires soemthing different, use the same thing in all my customers cars/trucks.
did you ever have to use 5w-30 or other? I rarely see anything other than 10w-30 in most mechanic shops.
and thank you Eli for your detail reply.
anyway, one last thing if you don't mind.
does less viscous = less protection and more friction ? (yes, I got it, 10w-30 = 5w-30 for viscousity in operating temp)
Originally posted by: andylawcc
Originally posted by: Marlin1975
I use Mobil 10W30 year round. I also, unless it requires soemthing different, use the same thing in all my customers cars/trucks.
did you ever have to use 5w-30 or other? I rarely see anything other than 10w-30 in most mechanic shops.
and thank you Eli for your detail reply.
anyway, one last thing if you don't mind.
does less viscous = less protection and more friction ? (yes, I got it, 10w-30 = 5w-30 for viscousity in operating temp)
This is true, and is why, At least in the case of Pennzoil, their 10W-30 is more shear stable than their 5W-30. When those polymers shear, the oil literally thins out and becomes less than 30 weight. Fortunately(depending on your point of view), you also have oil vaporization fighting to thicken the oil, so I suppose it kinda evens out, at least a little... assuming your engine is in pretty good mechanical shape and isn't diluting the oil with fuel.Originally posted by: Marlin1975
Originally posted by: andylawcc
Originally posted by: Marlin1975
I use Mobil 10W30 year round. I also, unless it requires soemthing different, use the same thing in all my customers cars/trucks.
did you ever have to use 5w-30 or other? I rarely see anything other than 10w-30 in most mechanic shops.
and thank you Eli for your detail reply.
anyway, one last thing if you don't mind.
does less viscous = less protection and more friction ? (yes, I got it, 10w-30 = 5w-30 for viscousity in operating temp)
I do use 5W30 in cars that have less then 6K. But anytime after 6-9K I switch to 10W30. Yes 5w30 flows a little better when cold, BUT its polymers have to stretch further to make it work as a 30 weight so it has a GREATER chance of breakdown in that matter. Kinda like stretching a rubber band 3 inches vs 4 inches. It might be able to do both, but the chance of the 3 inch breaking before the same 4 inch one is slimmer.
Absolutely.But keeping up with reg. oil changes is a MUCH better protection then trying to decide between 5w30 and 10w30.
Originally posted by: FrustratedUser
Why did you even ask the question?
Kinda like stretching a rubber band 3 inches vs 4 inches. It might be able to do both, but the chance of the 3 inch breaking before the same 4 inch one is slimmer.
Fortunately(depending on your point of view), you also have oil vaporization fighting to thicken the oil, so I suppose it kinda evens out, at least a little