1 Oil and weasel words Mon Jan 21, 2013 8:17 pm
Ned
Life time member
No, let’s not revive yet another oil tread. I just like to highlight some of the weasel words oil makers use to mislead us into buying their product. One thing is that I am biased towards HOT WEATHER climate uses ( http://www.weatherzone.com.au/images/climate/wz_clim_annual_site_66062.png ).
For example:
"ENVIRO+ 5W-40 Full Syn.
Viscosity : 5w-40
Approvals:...
. VW 502.00/505.00 (VW http://www.penriteoil.com.au/oem_pdfs/E+5W-40%20VW%20502.00%20505.00.pdf )
. GM dexos2TMLicensed (GM USA)
. Porsche A40
. MB-Approval 229.51(Mercedes )
. BMW Longlife-04
Key Specifications:
· API SN/CF, ACEA C2/C3
· MB 229.31
. VW 505.01"
They give us all the data such as viscosity, synthetic, approvals and key specs, but they hide behind words such as:
a. ENVIRO+ : means that it contains friction modifiers to make the oil slippery and save fuel, therefore "ENVIRO". Not good for wet clutch applications but fine for dry clutch K bikes.
b. Full Synthetic?: Group III, Group IV or V or a mix. It matters. Price and the methods used to make the multigrade oil. Recently I’ve found that in the case of mineral stock they would start with 5w and boost the hot viscosity number with additives. In the case of full synthetic they will start with 40 (5w-40) and fiddle it a bit. So, as additives breakdown, and they do, the synthetic will tend towards 40 weight but mineral will thin out towards 5w.
c. Approvals by OEM:. This is actual approvals REWARDED by OEM and it is important because some OEM specify how long the oil can be kept in the sump before it needs to be changed. E.g. VW and others specify 10,000km, that is for 10,000km the oil must stay in spec. This is a key feature.
d. Key Specs: these may or may not be Approvals by OEM. This is the problem area. What it says is that it meets the specs, according to the oil maker, but there is no formal approval. Hmmm… yes, I know, it is costly, but if you don’t have it, don’t say it. This is done regularly. They often list lots of specs, but may not have approvals for them. you just have to trust them.
So the moral of the story is:
a. Pick a group if they will tell you which (mineral, mineral/synthetic or fully synthetic). Remember that synthetic can mean all kinds of stuff.
b. Get the correct viscosity
c. Look for Approvals REWARDED. For me VW and or BMW LL will do just fine.
d. Get your favourite brand.
For example:
"ENVIRO+ 5W-40 Full Syn.
Viscosity : 5w-40
Approvals:...
. VW 502.00/505.00 (VW http://www.penriteoil.com.au/oem_pdfs/E+5W-40%20VW%20502.00%20505.00.pdf )
. GM dexos2TMLicensed (GM USA)
. Porsche A40
. MB-Approval 229.51(Mercedes )
. BMW Longlife-04
Key Specifications:
· API SN/CF, ACEA C2/C3
· MB 229.31
. VW 505.01"
They give us all the data such as viscosity, synthetic, approvals and key specs, but they hide behind words such as:
a. ENVIRO+ : means that it contains friction modifiers to make the oil slippery and save fuel, therefore "ENVIRO". Not good for wet clutch applications but fine for dry clutch K bikes.
b. Full Synthetic?: Group III, Group IV or V or a mix. It matters. Price and the methods used to make the multigrade oil. Recently I’ve found that in the case of mineral stock they would start with 5w and boost the hot viscosity number with additives. In the case of full synthetic they will start with 40 (5w-40) and fiddle it a bit. So, as additives breakdown, and they do, the synthetic will tend towards 40 weight but mineral will thin out towards 5w.
c. Approvals by OEM:. This is actual approvals REWARDED by OEM and it is important because some OEM specify how long the oil can be kept in the sump before it needs to be changed. E.g. VW and others specify 10,000km, that is for 10,000km the oil must stay in spec. This is a key feature.
d. Key Specs: these may or may not be Approvals by OEM. This is the problem area. What it says is that it meets the specs, according to the oil maker, but there is no formal approval. Hmmm… yes, I know, it is costly, but if you don’t have it, don’t say it. This is done regularly. They often list lots of specs, but may not have approvals for them. you just have to trust them.
So the moral of the story is:
a. Pick a group if they will tell you which (mineral, mineral/synthetic or fully synthetic). Remember that synthetic can mean all kinds of stuff.
b. Get the correct viscosity
c. Look for Approvals REWARDED. For me VW and or BMW LL will do just fine.
d. Get your favourite brand.
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I reserve the right to voice my opinions on any subject known to man
Ned
05/1986 (K55) K100RS Motorsport (Europe), Production Code: 0503, 110k km, VIN:0140519 (SOLD)
1976 Honda Goldwing GL1000 (naked)
1997 BMW K1200RS red, VIN: WB10544A1VZA22667