Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Gene Kearns" wrote Marine grade oils are formulated for a damp environment. Not a bad idea. Using a straight weight oil in warm climates is probably preferable to a multi viscosity oil. If you don't need cold weather starting formulation, why give up superior EP lubricity? Before you feel the need to give the dry start lecture, consider that the first number in a multi-viscosity oil has nothing to do with viscosity. If it did, there wouldn't be any 0W-40 oils... which there are. IMHO, synthetics are preferable. Modern engines are built with such tight tolerances, using a thick oil probably does more harm than good. I'd use multiweights on any reasonably modern water cooled gasoline engine. Have not yet become a user of synthetics. Tend to change oil more by date than hours. Twice a year for cars and boats. Believe strongly in changing oil filters with each oil change and sometimes wonder if more often might be better. Starts, condensation, and poor oil circulation are probably greater concern than viscosity breakdown for marine engines. 360,000 km so far on Chev Blazer V6, too soon to conclude about old 165 Merc I/O. Used to put 50W into old British motorcycles, but they never ran enough to test longevity. surfnturf surfnturf |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|