turbo50
Well-Known Member
The first number is the weight for when the oil is cold5/50w vs 20/50..Anyone know the difference ?![]()
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The first number is the weight for when the oil is cold5/50w vs 20/50..Anyone know the difference ?![]()
Correct,thats why drag motors run 20/50 . You made my pointThe first number is the weight for when the oil is cold
Here is some information regarding oil viscosity and its effect on shear protection. This is from the motor oil engineering test data from the 540ratblog.
https://540ratblog.wordpress.com/2013/06/20/motor-oil-wear-test-ranking/
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Oil “flow” is lubrication, and using thicker oil will simply reduce critical oil flow for no good reason. Plain bearings, such as rod and main bearings, are components that are not designed to be lubricated just by an oil film, they are designed to be lubricated by a flow of liquid oil. Keep in mind that oil pressure is NOT what keeps these parts separated. Oil pressure is a measurement of resistance to flow, and the pressure only serves to supply/move the oil to the clearance between the bearings and the crankshaft journals, and of course to move oil throughout the entire engine. The crankshaft journals and its bearing shells are kept separated by an incompressible hydrodynamic liquid oil wedge that is formed as the liquid oil is pulled in between the spinning parts. All liquids are incompressible (that’s how hydraulics work, including brakes with their watery thin brake fluid), so it does NOT matter what the viscosity of any liquid is. Thick oil or thin oil will create the same incompressible liquid oil wedge.
In engines designed with slightly more tolerances to allow that thicker engine flow. Mustangs run best at 30w unless specifically designed to run thicker. A racing motor designed to run thick oil at high RPMs and high temps has no problem running said oil. Throwing 40w or 50w oil on a coyote that doesn't see constant high RPMs/high oil temps while at the same time putting a reische 170* t stat and lowering fan settings to come in early is just a downright silly combination.Correct,thats why drag motors run 20/50 . You made my point
and thats also why 5/50 is used on that 8500RPM GT350.
Thicker oil cools better and offers better protected under severe conditions
True but thicker oil offers better shock and cooling protection ,this is why its used in racing
Spun # 5 rod + 2 mains were starved of oil. I shut mine off immediately and barely ran it after having the issue. My block needed to have the mains line bored, but I got lucky and have a spare block now.(Ito in my storage shed waiting on a rainy day/possibly sell). Also, I had my crankshaft ground and reused it. .You guys with spun rod bearings...how much damage did you end up having?
Not sure I can agree with your statements, but that's OK. I think if you read further in what I posted above you will see it contradicts what your saying. Anyway :cheers:Correct,thats why drag motors run 20/50 . You made my point
and thats also why 5/50 is used on that 8500RPM GT350.
Thicker oil cools better and offers better protected under severe conditions
True but thicker oil offers better shock and cooling protection ,this is why its used in racing
My OPG failure starved 2 rod bearings, the rest of the motor was fine including the heads. Only had superficial wear on 3 of the head bearing caps. Block was fine, but crank according to MMR would cost as much to repair it as to buy a new crank. I ended up getting a new long block.You guys with spun rod bearings...how much damage did you end up having?
I would agree and so would the engineering oil data from the report I posted. About most of what you have said. The 5wXX to 0wXX weight oil being thicker at running temp is somewhat true but there are variables and it would be minimal.So I'm going to chime in here as a non-oil expert just to repeat some things I've read after researching this a few days. You all are free to refute or reject them them, in fact I encourage you to so I learn more:
- Too many people say "thicker oil protects better" because it keeps oil pressure up. In reality, more oil pressure doesn't mean more flow, it means less. Less flow isn't something you necessarily want when you're running hotter.
- Apparently our motors (valve?) clearances are designed specifically for 20 weight oil, so using thicker oil actually messes with the tolerances and therefore the tune. I would guess this isn't a problem if you're custom tuning anyway?
- 5wXX is actually a bit thicker than 0wXX at operating temperature because of the additives that make the oil flow better at cold start.
- Most wear for normal driving conditions actually occurs during cold start, which is why 5w is recommended over 0w.
Thoughts?