If you're asking if there's an official recommendation - yes, the Ford Gen-III 85W95 lube that the axle was validated in (the old 75W140 is now obsolete). Keep in mind that the diff is just one part of the axle system, and other important components share that lube. The carrier and pinion bearings depend on the lube, but even more importantly, so does the ring & pinion set. The later is much more sensitive to lubrication than the diff is (which, as others mentioned, will work fine in most any suitable oil). For that reason, I almost always tell people to refer to the R&P manufacturer's recommendation for lube. In this case, that manufacturer is, of course, Ford.EXP Jawa
Is there a fluid that you prefer for our application?
Well, like I said, officially the Ford oil is what the axle system was validated in. It represents a "safe" baseline. Other brands like you mention are well-regarded, reputable products. As far as the diff goes, yes, I would say they're fine - though I have zero data as to what impact they'll have on performance. But I would still suggest that you refer to Ford - or Ford Racing - about using them with the OEM (since FRPP resells OEM parts) ring & pinion.So you would only recommend ford fluid not Royal purple, Amsoil, or mobile?
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Not that torsen needs friction modifiers unlike clutch type LSD. I wonder if I can find a magnetic drain bolt to keep metal from floating inside the diff.put Mobil 1 75W90 in mine, the factory fill was dark gray from the break in. Only have 4200 miles. Bottle said it already has limited slip friction modifiers.
Not that torsen needs friction modifiers unlike clutch type LSD. I wonder if I can find a magnetic drain bolt to keep metal from floating inside the diff.
Also, I'd be surprised if the standard fill plug in the carrier wasn't already magnetic. That's pretty standard practice.RE: friction modifier, a few comments. The differential is not a clutch pack unit, as noted, but modifier additive is still used in the OEM fill. It is an NVH countermeasure, as in certain conditions, the diff occasionally exhibited a "moan" noise in a very low torque, low speed, full lock turn. The modifier gets rid of this, and in order to limit the number of warranty claims on normal-functioning parts, it gets used from the start. You certainly can run without it, and if you pick up the noise, add it back in if so inclined. The noise itself is a friction-generated sort of squeak, characteristic of turning a helical gear under light load against a hardened surface. Essentially, they all do it, it just isn't always audible.