JHZR2
Staff member
Originally Posted By: Bullwinkle007
i used to own a 04 camry before it got rear ended. it had over 300k on the clock. it always ran 5/30 10/30 10/40 15/40. is there anyone here that has a vehicle over 250k that has always had 0/20 in it? i dont see a thin oil and engines lasting 500k.
Based upon what objective evidence? Gut feel does not count.
Originally Posted By: Bullwinkle007
as the engine wears, whats going to provide extra film in the cylinder walls?
There are lots of engines of various types that still show good crosshatch on the cylinder walls at high mileage, certainly at 250k. What basis do you have that the cylinder wall wear is the point of issue or determinant of longevity???
Originally Posted By: Bullwinkle007
when you start looking around overseas, the exact same engine used in the same car over there, they run a higher grade oil, and the manual states 0/20 for best mpg, but we really want you to run a 30 or 40wt you can also go to M1 and it will tell you. google m1 uk, enter vehicle, and engine, you'll get the weight they use there. i think the European cars use a higher weight oil for a reason, its better for protection, especially constant high speed driving
Interesting. Travel in Europe much?
Funny that you use the UK as the primary example. Their highest speed limits are 70 MPH, per here:
https://www.gov.uk/speed-limits
And the UK is roughly the size of Oregon, Wyoming or Michigan. Not huge, so not long distance high speed driving.
Even Germany... Ever drive the Autobahn? Yes, there's no limit, but routinely at interchanges the speed limit appears and drops speed rapidly. So there's something to be said about big brakes and high acceleration out of the speed zone, but with 82M people in a country that is 85% the size of CA, the distances arent that far/long.
Originally Posted By: Bullwinkle007
this car is run hard
So longevity is determined solely by oil viscosity and how hard you are choosing to run the vehicle will have no impact?
Understood that many older manuals say that if towing or routinely carrying heavier loads, higher viscosity may be prudent, but it needs to be understood that there is an engineering balance between being too lightly loaded, too heavily loaded, viscosity of lubricants, time at temperature, etc. Increase in any one parameter can only be bandaided by something like oil viscosity, or fully fixed by utilizing equipment that is more capable.
i used to own a 04 camry before it got rear ended. it had over 300k on the clock. it always ran 5/30 10/30 10/40 15/40. is there anyone here that has a vehicle over 250k that has always had 0/20 in it? i dont see a thin oil and engines lasting 500k.
Based upon what objective evidence? Gut feel does not count.
Originally Posted By: Bullwinkle007
as the engine wears, whats going to provide extra film in the cylinder walls?
There are lots of engines of various types that still show good crosshatch on the cylinder walls at high mileage, certainly at 250k. What basis do you have that the cylinder wall wear is the point of issue or determinant of longevity???
Originally Posted By: Bullwinkle007
when you start looking around overseas, the exact same engine used in the same car over there, they run a higher grade oil, and the manual states 0/20 for best mpg, but we really want you to run a 30 or 40wt you can also go to M1 and it will tell you. google m1 uk, enter vehicle, and engine, you'll get the weight they use there. i think the European cars use a higher weight oil for a reason, its better for protection, especially constant high speed driving
Interesting. Travel in Europe much?
Funny that you use the UK as the primary example. Their highest speed limits are 70 MPH, per here:
https://www.gov.uk/speed-limits
And the UK is roughly the size of Oregon, Wyoming or Michigan. Not huge, so not long distance high speed driving.
Even Germany... Ever drive the Autobahn? Yes, there's no limit, but routinely at interchanges the speed limit appears and drops speed rapidly. So there's something to be said about big brakes and high acceleration out of the speed zone, but with 82M people in a country that is 85% the size of CA, the distances arent that far/long.
Originally Posted By: Bullwinkle007
this car is run hard
So longevity is determined solely by oil viscosity and how hard you are choosing to run the vehicle will have no impact?
Understood that many older manuals say that if towing or routinely carrying heavier loads, higher viscosity may be prudent, but it needs to be understood that there is an engineering balance between being too lightly loaded, too heavily loaded, viscosity of lubricants, time at temperature, etc. Increase in any one parameter can only be bandaided by something like oil viscosity, or fully fixed by utilizing equipment that is more capable.