
sprintman
Members-
Posts
105 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Gallery
Store
Everything posted by sprintman
-
99obw Valvoline tend to have lower anti-wear additive treats compared to most oils and don't do well across the board in UOA analysis with a few exceptions. There are better oils for same or lower price IMO eg. Mobil 1 Supersyn good UOA's in nearly all engines and is readily available but 30W's are on the thin side. Mobil have new M1 SUV 5W40 in the US now and should be good for an outback. I run BP Visco 5000 5W40 in my 00 Outback FWIW.
-
I have access to a Timken and it has proved very useful in looking at anti-wear properties of oils. Also we have purchased some 5 cases of Auto-Rx at approx A$600 per case and multiple testing in cars, trucks, and a lot of forklifts in particular shows what it can do. Nearly every UOA I've seen with a K & N air filter has high Silicon and users usually revert to OEM paper. There is a huge amount of info on BITOG but more importantly the industry people who participate particularly those such as Blackstone Analysis, GeorgeCLS (certified lubricants specialist), Molakule an chemist of high repute etc. Like any web site you need to read between the lines and make up your own mind.
-
UOA's are the only real way to see how an oil performs in any particular engine or application. testa above show some useful info but you must read between the lines. M1 SS, Pennzoil Purebase etc show excellent UOA's and BITOG has a good UOA section. Search there for oil type or engine to see what performs best in yours.
-
Oil usage
sprintman replied to rich1291's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVX
Anybody able to post the TSB on 0W30 oil? -
Oil usage
sprintman replied to rich1291's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVX
99obw is spot on. M1 is a thin 30W. Try the M1 0W40 maybe or any 30/40W oil thats 12+ cSt @ 100C (on every oils spec sheet on the web)