Jump to content
Ultimate Subaru Message Board

Another oil use question of a different kind


Recommended Posts

Old school folks like myself were taught to use a light weight oil on the winter and heavy in the summer. Back then 1970’s Subarus , we were generally sold on Castrol. And a 10w/40 or as time drove forward more of the market dictated 5w/30. Until recently as many of you old guys know you could easily score 20w oils for summer. Not so easy anymore.

So now come the questions. 
 

Castrol in your favor or Amsoil (yet to use) or ? The Castrol slogan “engineered for small cars engine” kind of hooked us good. 
 

At what point do these modern engines no longer require or feel groovy on varied oils per season ? I’m leaving the EJ22 era now and we’ll be running 06 and 03/04 Legacys going forward.

Just use what they say and don’t try to be a hero ? 
 

That’s it for the moment. Thanks for your opinions or advice. 

Edited by moosens
Link to comment
Share on other sites

GD may have the best view on this subject, but i DO believe CAFE rules have pushed car makers to slide the viscosity scale downward in the US market. It may be worse on recent vehicles (say, 2014, 15+ ?)

And it seems in other markets, the engine oil viscosities are higher for the same engines. My wife just bought a Honda CR-V and on the main forum for that car, they also show the same car in Europe with a heavier weight oil recommended.

Also, your location is distinctly different from mine. I am comfortable using heavier weight oils (certainly at the 'top' number) due to ambient temps here. It is said the most wear is starting a 'cold' engine. At that moment you have zero oil pressure. The thought that I park my car for hours at work, let it sit in direct sunlight in August, then go and start it when it could be 120*F or w'ever underhood - makes me wonder if 20 or even 30 weight oil has left ANY protecting film behind in the journals/bearings. And the question is even MORE important for an engine that could have 150K miles of wear. 

 

Some Subaru engines also have had a too-small oil pump from the factory, others may recall if your 03 for instance would benefit from a different pump (anyone?)

Anyway, it's a very good question, not new, but worrisome, and worth trying to get a consensus from people.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Paul, I ran 10W40 in my '83 EA81  after it hit about 100K, still runs to this day with about 400K.  Mostly Quaker State back then.  On my '96 EJ22 I ran mostly 10W30, but I got it with  over 200K well maintained miles on it already, and AFAIK, it still runs good.  Mostly Castrol, sometimes NAPA brand oil.  On my present 2008 EJ25 with ~225K, I (and the previous owner) have been  running Castrol 5W30, as recommended in the manual.  I switched to "High Mileage" Castrol at about 210K.  No engine issues.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 hours ago, moosens said:

Old school folks like myself were taught to use a light weight oil on the winter and heavy in the summer. Back then 1970’s Subarus , we were generally sold on Castrol. And a 10w/40 or as time drove forward more of the market dictated 5w/30. Until recently as many of you old guys know you could easily score 20w oils for summer. Not so easy anymore.

So now come the questions. 
 

Castrol in your favor or Amsoil (yet to use) or ? The Castrol slogan “engineered for small cars engine” kind of hooked us good. 
 

At what point do these modern engines no longer require or feel groovy on varied oils per season ? I’m leaving the EJ22 era now and we’ll be running 06 and 03/04 Legacys going forward.

Just use what they say and don’t try to be a hero ? 
 

That’s it for the moment. Thanks for your opinions or advice. 

Use synthetic. The end. Lol.   If cost is a concern extend your oil change intervals as synthetic allows.  But check oil level often. Brand and weight don’t matter if you want top shelf get amsoil and read GDs data driven commentary on past threads. 

You have a 2007, those blow the short block all the time due to oil loss/low oil, 10,000 times before they do due to weight or brand.  Use synthetic. The end. 

Most info is short sighted, anecdotal and/or impractical and useless. 

Practically speaking it doesn’t matter, except use full synthetic for your control rings. Follow the owners manual for weight of that year 5W and 10w are both fine.  Varying weights isn’t necessary but not a terrible idea either.

Most responsible car owners with average daily driver commuters change their oil well before the oil is problematic.  so it’s not like they’re being pushed to the limits where one brand will perform better than another

Subarus are making 200,000+ miles all day long on whatever oil is on sale. And there’s people promoting every brand as awesome because some oil wizard told them about it and they’ve never had issues.   Well join the club buffoons, that’s everyone, no matter the brand. Lol.  And that’s why no one can resist talking about it - theyre guaranteed to be right, or partially right....because most of what people talk about doesn’t matter empirically or practically.  I’ve never blown an engine and have driven a ton of Subarus past 200,000. Is it because of my meticulous attention and robust knowledge of oil?  Good grief, no. They fail due to oil loss, low oil and neglect.  Use synthetic to keep those control rings clean.

your year is prone to low oil. Your best protection is synthetic, frequently checking the oil level  and not brand or weight, beyond obvious guidelines.  Those engines are routinely found with blown short blocks due to oil starvation not weight and brand. 

There is a small range where better oils will protect in adverse conditions like low oil where the temps and over cycling degrade the oil properties. But the range where that happens before it hits low enough oil to destroy and engine no matter what oil is pretty narrow relatively speaking. But still amsoil would offer some additional protection there. 

Edited by idosubaru
  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

We entirely disregard Subaru's recommendations on oil unless the car is under factory warranty. We average about 1-2 oil changes 5 days a week for customers - usually schedule these at 9am to get them out of the way and out the door. 

THE ONLY TIME we use anything other than 5w40 (or 5w50 for 400+ HP), is on cars that are under warranty obligation to use 5w30 or 5w20. 

Everything else gets 5w40 Amsoil Euro FS. This is an XL oil with a 5w40 spec (normal XL is 10w40). https://www.amsoil.com/p/sae-5w-40-fs-synthetic-european-motor-oil-efm/

It's rated for 12,000 miles. We run it for 6,000 miles since the WIX filters rate about there and Subaru's shear their oil and dilute it with fuel (especially the turbo models) causing some level of consumption after about 2500 miles and we can't trust most customers to check their oil. 

I'm quite sure that all our customers combined have 10's of millions of miles on this oil and we have NEVER seen a failure related to oil breakdown, sludge, or really any lubrication related failure other than customers that burn all their oil up or leak it out and cause mechanical damage from the complete lack of oil. 

I have torn down engines due to failures unrelated to the oil - in one case we pulled down a built engine due to a cracked cylinder liner - plugged injector from tank contamination caused a lean condition under boost and the high cylinder pressure blew out the sleeve. Even under the SEVERE detonation conditions that resulted in a cracked cylinder sleeve we saw ZERO damage to the bearing journals running 5w40 Amsoil. 

So I'm not inclined to change my process. 

And I have reviewed the specs of the new engines vs. the older engines with respect to bearing sizes and clearances and oil pump specifications, etc - there is no difference between the older engines that specified 10w30 and the newer engines that specify 5w20. Subaru changes the spec based on meeting emissions and economy guidelines, and changes the recommendations for different markets. They have in the past offered 40 and 50 weight racing oils with their branding - in other markets. 

Viscosity is chosen based on engine LOAD. Higher load requires thicker oil so it doesn't squirt out of the bearings under high cylinder pressure. 

Take note that I own and manage a performance shop - as such my customers are largely composed of "Enthusiasts" who often drive their cars at the hard. I myself drive all my cars hard and have blown up my share of engines personally. Hard driving equals high load. And thus a step up in viscosity is warranted. 

GD

Edited by GeneralDisorder
  • Like 2
  • Thanks 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ideally, careful oil pressure monitoring and lab testing of the used oil will tell you what works best for you.

 

For my daily drivers, I'm wholeheartedly of the opinion that the best oil is new oil. I use the cheapest 5w30 I can get my hands on (usually Walmart or Fleet Farm house brands) and change it more often then recommended. I'm a bit more picky on filters, but not by a lot.

 

I have a pressure gauge and a 11mm oil pump on my EJ25 daily, and don't see much of a difference in pressures summer to winter (it's 93*F here today, and not uncommon to see 40 below days in the winter. Although my car does spend overnights in an unheated/uninsulated garage, so we have to get a pretty good gold stretch for it to be below zero in the mornings. 

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...