I am looking for an alternative to Toyota WS that is more geared to heavy duty use and prioritizes good bearing lubrication and viscosity retention over maximum MPG if anyone has any recommendations.
Also wouldnt thicker viscosity ATF generally result in firmer, more aggressive shifts? Or am I...
"Unfortunate" is how I would describe the end of my previous 2014. Summer of 2024 someone jerked over from the lane over just as I was passing them and they were still in my blind spot.
Turned the bike completely sideways at freeway speeds and sent it tumbling and me flying while they fled the...
I am certainly not an oil expert or anything but I have yet to see a downside for reliability, especially in hot South Texas. It might cost my FJR1300 a couple windage based ponies up near the ~9,500 rev limiter, but honestly that bike is more than fast enough to get me into all the trouble I...
Awesome thanks!
I live in seriously hot South Texas where 9F is the historical low in 1989 and 90-105F is the common temp through most of the year. I run Mobil 1 15W50 AFS in all my other cars and bikes down here, actually saw a very consistent 0.5mpg improvement in my 2014 Ford Edge switching...
The problem is for most street motorcycles fork oil temp does not seem to have that wide of a range of temps. Forks are out front and have a relatively big surface area. My own testing with an IR thermometer on several different street motorcycles has shown that even as much as 10-15F above...
It isnt that I don't consider viscosities of fork oil, I do think that viscosity IS very important for fork oil, but viscosity and the difference between advertised weight on the front of the bottle vs the kinematic viscosity at 40C are just about all that dominate in every conversation on fork...
Yea, I usually lightly coat the fork tubes with a silicone based grease containing PTFE, which is how I know increased stiction can make a difference. Getting a used bike with dry fork tubes and adding a little lube on the outside can make it very clear.
Thank you, this sort of info is exactly what I was looking for.
So in your experience how would these compare to something like a mid quality synthetic engine oil (maybe Mobil1) or more modern synthetic ATF (thinking something generic like maybe Castrol Transmax or similar)? Particularly as far...
I suppose, which is why I keep keep coming back to this:
So far it all appears to be a bunch of hokum as far as I can tell, and other fluids seem to work just as well if not better while being significantly cheaper.
Honestly I am just asking for any differences that someone of my understanding level of oils, which is low, might not be aware of.
Motorcycle suspension damping valves are like stacks of very thin washers, and fork damping cartridges achieve their damping by some combination of shoving the oil...
Again, what makes the fluid "correct"? As I asked before:
Yes, although I am not sure why this subject seems to almost completely dominate every conversation about fork oil, but it seems very simple, the number on the front of the bottle is meaningless for forks, as I said in my original...
Actually no, those arnt on the same topic at all. I was looking for the differences in fork oils and other fluids BESIDES viscosity.
If you read through those you will find almost every post about the fluid itself in every one is about viscosity or viscosity index. The exceptions are questions...