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yet, yo-yo, the fact is the statement was made that multi-grade oil tickens up
at ****very high temps***** AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNDDDDDDD DDDDDDDDDDDDDD this is a reason to use single weight oil. sorry, dood, but single weight oils thicken up under the very same very high temps, so the arguement is specious (look up the word). that is also true of single weight oils, but you knew that didn't you (you being a service manager and all)? The discussion that you interupted concerns mult-grade oils. Bill Grannis service manager |
On Sat, 09 Oct 2004 05:54:19 GMT, WaIIy
wrote: ~~ snippage ~~ I appreciate you thoughts and agree, it's just that I don;t have definitive information on exactly what Mercury recommends for what temperature. Ps for some other posters, my engines are FWC. I don't mean to be offensive here, but you have the basis for making a solid decision on this. Right from the Mercury web site: What type of oil should I use? Can I use synthetic oil? To help obtain optimum engine performance and to provide maximum protection, we recommend the use of Mercury Precision 4-Cycle 25W-40 Marine Engine Oil. This oil is a special blend of 25-weight and 40-weight oils for marine engines. If not available, a good grade, straight weight, detergent automotive oil of correct viscosity, with an API service rating of SH,CF/CF-2 may be used. In those areas where Mercury Precision 4-Cycle 25W-40 Marine Engine Oil or a recommended straight weight oil is not available, a multi-viscosity 20W-40 or, as a second but less preferable choice, 20W-50, with API service ratings of SH,CF/CF-2 may be used. IMPORTANT: The use of non-detergent oils, multi-viscosity oils (other than Quicksilver 25W-40 or a good quality 20W-40 or 20W-50), synthetic oils, low quality oils or oils that contain solid additives are specifically NOT recommended. The table below is a guide to crankcase oil selection. The oil filter should always be changed with the engine oil. AIR TEMPERATURE Oil Type All Temperatures Mercury Precision 4-Cycle 25W-40 Marine Engine Oil Below 32? F (0? C) SAE 20W 32-50? F (0-10? C) SAE 30W Above 50? F (10? C) SAE 40W This crankcase oil recommendation supersedes all previously printed crankcase oil recommendations for MerCruiser gasoline engines. The reason for this change is to include the newer engine oils that are now available in the recommendation. Older owner manuals, service manuals and other publications that are not regularly updated will not be revised to show this latest engine oil recommendation. Current owners manuals, service manuals and other service publications that receive regular updates will receive this revised recommendation the next time they are updated. Hope that helps. Later, Tom "Beware the one legged man in a butt kicking contest - he is there for a reason." Wun Hung Lo - date unknown |
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... we recommend the use of Mercury Precision 4-Cycle 25W-40 Marine Engine Oil. This oil is a special blend of 25-weight and 40-weight oils for marine . What crap! If you blend 25 and 40 weight oil you don't get 25w-40 you get an average viscosity of the two oils based on their ratio. MM's 25w40 is formulated the same way everyone else's mulit-weights are. They start with a base 25 and add polymers (assuming that it's dino oil). |
"JAXAshby" wrote in message ... yet, yo-yo, the fact is the statement was made that multi-grade oil tickens up at ****very high temps***** AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNDDDDDDD DDDDDDDDDDDDDD this is a reason to use single weight oil. sorry, dood, but single weight oils thicken up under the very same very high temps, so the arguement is specious (look up the word). Guys... oil does not thicken when you heat it up. |
On Sat, 09 Oct 2004 20:06:26 GMT, "DanO" wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message .. . we recommend the use of Mercury Precision 4-Cycle 25W-40 Marine Engine Oil. This oil is a special blend of 25-weight and 40-weight oils for marine . What crap! If you blend 25 and 40 weight oil you don't get 25w-40 you get an average viscosity of the two oils based on their ratio. MM's 25w40 is formulated the same way everyone else's mulit-weights are. They start with a base 25 and add polymers (assuming that it's dino oil). I will readily admit that I don't know a lot about this, but your contention was my understanding - base twenty five and on from there. However, sometimes you get marketing idiots who don't understand anything other than the fact that they are very overpaid to do what they do which is changing and redoing "concepts" and this may well be one of those times. :) Take care. Tom "The beatings will stop when morale improves." E. Teach, 1717 |
On Sat, 09 Oct 2004 17:38:16 -0400, Gene Kearns
wrote: On Sat, 09 Oct 2004 20:14:39 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sat, 09 Oct 2004 20:06:26 GMT, "DanO" wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... we recommend the use of Mercury Precision 4-Cycle 25W-40 Marine Engine Oil. This oil is a special blend of 25-weight and 40-weight oils for marine . What crap! If you blend 25 and 40 weight oil you don't get 25w-40 you get an average viscosity of the two oils based on their ratio. MM's 25w40 is formulated the same way everyone else's mulit-weights are. They start with a base 25 and add polymers (assuming that it's dino oil). They probably start with a viscosity near 25, but the point is that 25W is a relative number used to rate the "crankability" of an engine at low temperatures. A base stock, somewhere between SAE40 and SAE25 is employed and pour point depressants are added to make the oil shear at lower temperatures.... thus the engine spins easier. At 100 Deg C 5W-40, 15W-40, and SAE 40 should be in the same kinematic viscosity range. At cold temperatures.... the lower the W number the easier the engine will crank... single weight will (obviously) fare the worst. Note that the amusing point is that this specification doesn't address pumpability.... as one poster here steadfastly believes. For pumpability, one should reference the Borderline Pumping Temperature... which gives the minimum temperature at which you may expect adequate flow through your engine. You know - in between the other BS, you glean nuggets of wonderful information. Neat info. Later, Tom ----------- "Angling may be said to be so like the mathematics that it can never be fully learnt..." Izaak Walton "The Compleat Angler", 1653 |
agreed.
we recommend the use of Mercury Precision 4-Cycle 25W-40 Marine Engine Oil. This oil is a special blend of 25-weight and 40-weight oils for marine . What crap! If you blend 25 and 40 weight oil you don't get 25w-40 you get an average viscosity of the two oils based on their ratio. MM's 25w40 is formulated the same way everyone else's mulit-weights are. They start with a base 25 and add polymers (assuming that it's dino oil). |
junnie, why is it you think "viscosity" is in any particular way different from
"pumpability"? Gene Kearns Date: 10/9/2004 5:38 PM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: On Sat, 09 Oct 2004 20:14:39 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sat, 09 Oct 2004 20:06:26 GMT, "DanO" wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... we recommend the use of Mercury Precision 4-Cycle 25W-40 Marine Engine Oil. This oil is a special blend of 25-weight and 40-weight oils for marine . What crap! If you blend 25 and 40 weight oil you don't get 25w-40 you get an average viscosity of the two oils based on their ratio. MM's 25w40 is formulated the same way everyone else's mulit-weights are. They start with a base 25 and add polymers (assuming that it's dino oil). They probably start with a viscosity near 25, but the point is that 25W is a relative number used to rate the "crankability" of an engine at low temperatures. A base stock, somewhere between SAE40 and SAE25 is employed and pour point depressants are added to make the oil shear at lower temperatures.... thus the engine spins easier. At 100 Deg C 5W-40, 15W-40, and SAE 40 should be in the same kinematic viscosity range. At cold temperatures.... the lower the W number the easier the engine will crank... single weight will (obviously) fare the worst. Note that the amusing point is that this specification doesn't address pumpability.... as one poster here steadfastly believes. For pumpability, one should reference the Borderline Pumping Temperature... which gives the minimum temperature at which you may expect adequate flow through your engine. -- Grady-White Gulfstream, out of Southport, NC. http://myworkshop.idleplay.net/cavern/ Homepage http://www.southharbourvillageinn.com/directions.asp Where Southport,NC is located. http://www.thebayguide.com/rec.boats Rec.boats at Lee Yeaton's Bayguide |
DanO, it does at _very_ high temps, above 300F. That wasn't part of the
discussion (and needed have been part of the discussion) until some poster incorrectly stated that only multi-grade oils did this. It is a probable with all petro oils. yet, yo-yo, the fact is the statement was made that multi-grade oil tickens up at ****very high temps***** AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNDDDDDDD DDDDDDDDDDDDDD this is a reason to use single weight oil. sorry, dood, but single weight oils thicken up under the very same very high temps, so the arguement is specious (look up the word). Guys... oil does not thicken when you heat it up. |
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