Motokan
Member
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2026
- Threads
- 6
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- 21
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- 8
- Location
- Pensylvania
- First Name
- Walter
- Vehicle(s)
- Mustang GT
- Thread starter
- #16
Yeah, another popcorn thread.
My POV is that provided the engine stays at design operating temperature there is no need to change the oil viscosity.
Typical CHT on street driving is 195F. Monitor that and so long as it stays that temp on cold or hot days then there is no need to change oil weight. Many of us run 5w30 full synthetic for this scenario.
Furthermore I use 12cs viscosity for preferred viscosity. IIRC this is 20wt for street driving. On track my CHT runs 230. 40wt is 12cs at that temp. So I run Mobil 1 0w40 Euro oil from the 12qt box on track. If I think I can get through a full oil cycle between track events then I will put 30wt back in.
No sir forget
Gents, I heard the "heavier" oil stayed on the moving parts.Hello; Oil??? Back when I first knew of oil I think it was mostly straight 30 weight. I used it in lawn mowers. The old sort with no safety features. The sort you killed the engine by pushing a metal grounding strap over onto the exposed spark plug. No other practical way to stop it from running.
The first multi weight I used was 10-w-30. That was the go-to oil for a long time. Thin like 10 weight oil when the engine is cold. Additives in the oil caused it to thicken to 30 weight as it got warm and then hot.
(NOTE- this was the reverse of how most liquids, including oils normally work. pour a dab of Canola oil in a cold skillet. Try tilting the skillet when clod and watch the oil. Then turn on a burner and let the skillet get warm to hot and tilt the skillet. The oil gets thinner and moves around easier.)
10-w-30 oil was a neat trick. That way you got effectively easier to move 10 weight oil when starting from cold. The 10 weight would course thru the engine easier at that crucial cold time. The oil only stayed at the thinner 10 weight for a little while. As the engine warmed up it got to a thicker viscosity which is good for crank & cam bearings, cam lobes and such.
Later on, 5-w-30 became more common. Both my current vehicles call for 5-w-30. They are over 20 years old. I can run 10-w-30 if the air temp is to be above freezing during the length of time I will be driving the vehicle. Back when I drove more miles I would change to 10-w-30 in the spring and back to 5-w-30 in the fall.
0-w-20 scares me a bit. 0-w-16 scares me a lot. Not so much the 0 since the oil will thicken soon and I can baby the engine till it gets warm. I do wonder about my neighbor who starts her car, drives the 75 feet to the major county highway and guns it to 60 MPH or better right away. I do wonder about the 0 part of oil if in fact her vehicle uses the stuff.
It is the 16 & 20 hot weight I think about. Does it really do the job well or is it part of the EPA and other such agencies squeeze placed onto manufacturers to squeeze max MPG's out of ICE engines in order to try to meet onerous fleet MPG standards.
(THANKFULLY some of those onerous standards are relaxed, at least, for a while.)
Ford changed Coyote to 5-w-30 a little while back is what I have been reading. My guess is to maybe prevent some ongoing engine problems. With the cam phasers and other things that work on oil I guess 5-w-30 is OK.
I already change oil at 3000 miles regardless of the labels. I am more interested in engine longevity than squeezing fractions of MPG's out. Working so far as my car is now 25 years old & my truck is 22 years old. An anecdotal observation at best. May well be my good looks at work.
My car has a timing chain is one reason I change oil at 3000 miles. I want the chain, tensioners and other overhead cam stuff lubed with clean oil.
To the question of the thread as I understand it. I would not change to a lighter weight oil for hot weather. The weight does not have much, if anything, to do with heat. My take is any weight will move heat. I do not know if a Mustang has an extra oil cooler built in from the factory. My truck does. Maybe having such an oil cooler added would be the way to go???
I have a feeling the stock setup and oil is good enough. Maybe not for track days or racing in Death Valley???
Longer than the "lighter" oil.
My question is legit. No popcorn needed.
My ride is a 2021 GT 5.0
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