Index
Motor Oil 102
Chapter two. It gets more difficult.
We
left off discussing that a 0W-30 weight oil is not thinner than a
10W-30 oil. They both have the same thickness at operating temperature.
The 0W-30 simply does not get as thick on cooling as the 10W-30. Both
are still way to thick to lubricate an engine at startup.
I have
heard several people say that Porsche specifically prohibits a 0W-XX
engine oil, that it is too thin. Now here is the partial truth I spoke
of earlier. We will discuss multigrade oils. Earlier we said that a
straight 30 weight oil has a thickness of 10 at the normal operating
temperature of your engine. The multigrade oils 0W-30 and 10W-30 also
have a thickness of 10 at 212 F.
The difference is at 75 F, your startup temperature in the morning.
Oil type... Thickness at 75 F...Thickness at 212 F
Straight 30...... 250......................10
10W-30............100......................10
0W-30..............40 ......................10
Straight 10........30....................... 6
Now
you can see that the difference between the desired thickness your
engine requires ( = 10 ) is closest to the 0W-30 oil at startup. It is
still too thick for normal operation. But it does not have far to go
before it warms up and thins to the correct viscosity. Remember that
most engine wear occurs at startup when the oil is too thick to
lubricate properly. It cannot flow and therefore cannot lubricate. Most
of the thick oil at startup actually goes through the bypass valve back
to the engine oil sump and not into your engine oil ways. This is
especially true when you really step on that gas pedal. You really need
more lubrication and you actually get less.
Note that a straight
10 weight oil is also too thick for your engine at startup. It has a
thickness of 30. Yet at operating temperatures it is too thin having a
thickness of 6. It needs to be around 10. The oil companies have added
viscosity index improvers or VI to oils to solve this dilemma. They
take a mineral based oil and add VI improvers so that it does not thin
as as much when it gets hotter. Now instead of only having a thickness
of 6 when hot it has a thickness of 10, just as we need.
The
penalty is the startup thickness also goes up to 100. This is better
than being up at 250 as a straight 30 weight oil though. Oil with a
startup thickness of 100 that becomes the appropriate thickness of 10
when fully warmed up is called a 10W-30 weight motor oil. This is NOT
as thick as a straight 30 weight oil at startup and it is NOT as thin
as a straight 10 weight oil at full operating temperature.
The
downside of a mineral based multigrade oil is that this VI additive
wears out over time and you end up with the original straight 10 weight
oil. It will go back to being too thin when hot. It will have a
thickness of 6 instead of 10. This may be why Porsche (according to
some people) does not want a 0W-30 but rather a 10W-30. If the VI wears
out the 0W-30 will ultimately be thinner, a straight 0 weight oil. When
the VI is used up in the 10W-30 oil it too is thinner. It goes back to
a straight 10 weight oil. They are both still too thick at startup,
both of them. The straight 0 weight oil, a 5 weight oil and a 10 weight
oil are all too thick at startup.
This is just theory however.
With normal oil change intervals the VI improver will not wear out and
so the problem does not really exist. In fact, oils do thin a little
with use. This is partly from dilution with blow by gasoline and partly
from VI improvers being used up. What is more interesting is that with
further use motor oils actually thicken and this is much worse than the
minimal thinning that may have occurred earlier.
Synthetic oils
are a whole different story. There is no VI improver added so there is
nothing to wear out. The actual oil molecules never wear out. You could
almost use the same oil forever. The problem is that there are other
additives and they do get used up. I suppose if there was a good way to
keep oil clean you could just add a can of additives every 6 months and
just change the filter, never changing the oil.
When the
additives wear out in a synthetic oil it still has the same viscosity.
It will not thin as a mineral oil. The fear that some say Porsche has
that oils thin when the VI runs out is not applicable to these
synthetic oils. These oils will always have the correct thickness when
hot and will still be too thick at startup as with all oils of all
types, regardless of the API / SAE viscosity rating.
Automotive
engine manufacturers know these principals of motor oils. They know
there is thinning or thickening that will occur. They take these things
into account when they write that owners manual. Mineral oil change
recommendations will generally include shorter time intervals than
those of synthetic oils.
The reality is that motor oils do not
need to be changed because they thin with use. It is the eventual
thickening that limits the time you may keep oil in your engine. The
limit is both time itself (with no motor use) and/or mileage use.
End of part two.
Index