0w-8 vs 0w-30

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Aug 7, 2024
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So I’m no expert in oils but I’ve learned a little bit over the past few years. I’m trying to reconcile whether my Toyota Camry could safely run 0w-30 motor oil without any detrimental effects of the added viscosity. If I understand correctly 0 weight oil is thicker when cold than 30 weight oil at operating temperature? If this is true, and if my used oil analysis of the 0w-8 proves it to be inadequate to prevent wear. Would the engine operate normally if I bumped it up to 0w-30? I mean the winter number is staying to same, it’s only the 2nd number that’s going up. If I understand correctly the 2nd number is not actually the weight of the oil but the protective characteristics of 30 weight at 100 degrees Celsius?
 
Toyotas that run 0w-8 can use up to 10w-30. This is from a different model with 1 cylinder less but clearances are identical since it's the same new engine architecture. But the a25a has remain unchanged clearance wise since it was introduced about 7 years ago and those use 0w-16 to 15w-40. It was tested to not have insufficient oil pressure with 0w-8 and since the pump is computer controlled it can always increase the amount it has to generate so it doesn't throw a rod. That and making sure the surface on the bearings are precise which is what allows 0w-8 in the first place. It was discussed before but I don't know the thread to link.

Screenshot 2025-02-03 143555.webp


This is for the a25a.
a25a 0w-16-15w-40-2.webp
 
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So I’m no expert in oils but I’ve learned a little bit over the past few years. I’m trying to reconcile whether my Toyota Camry could safely run 0w-30 motor oil without any detrimental effects of the added viscosity. If I understand correctly 0 weight oil is thicker when cold than 30 weight oil at operating temperature? If this is true, and if my used oil analysis of the 0w-8 proves it to be inadequate to prevent wear. Would the engine operate normally if I bumped it up to 0w-30? I mean the winter number is staying to same, it’s only the 2nd number that’s going up. If I understand correctly the 2nd number is not actually the weight of the oil but the protective characteristics of 30 weight at 100 degrees Celsius?
How many people have posted this over the years? There are no "0 weight" oils, if it is a 0W-8 grade then it is an 8-grade oil. Also not a weight. It acts as an 8-grade, never the mythical "0 weight". A 30-grade on the other hand acts like a 30-grade, all day long.

Winter rating is separate from the operating viscosity. And yes the engine will operate normally with a 30-grade.
 
So I’m no expert in oils but I’ve learned a little bit over the past few years. I’m trying to reconcile whether my Toyota Camry could safely run 0w-30 motor oil without any detrimental effects of the added viscosity. If I understand correctly 0 weight oil is thicker when cold than 30 weight oil at operating temperature? If this is true, and if my used oil analysis of the 0w-8 proves it to be inadequate to prevent wear. Would the engine operate normally if I bumped it up to 0w-30? I mean the winter number is staying to same, it’s only the 2nd number that’s going up. If I understand correctly the 2nd number is not actually the weight of the oil but the protective characteristics of 30 weight at 100 degrees Celsius?
I would wear a helmet, preferably one with Kevlar protection. When the engine explodes due to 0W30, you don't want a flying rod bearing to hit your head.
 
So I’m no expert in oils but I’ve learned a little bit over the past few years. I’m trying to reconcile whether my Toyota Camry could safely run 0w-30 motor oil without any detrimental effects of the added viscosity. If I understand correctly 0 weight oil is thicker when cold than 30 weight oil at operating temperature? If this is true, and if my used oil analysis of the 0w-8 proves it to be inadequate to prevent wear. Would the engine operate normally if I bumped it up to 0w-30? I mean the winter number is staying to same, it’s only the 2nd number that’s going up. If I understand correctly the 2nd number is not actually the weight of the oil but the protective characteristics of 30 weight at 100 degrees Celsius?

If the 0W-8 is proven by uoa to be insufficient, you need a rebuild. That's the danger of running thin oil, it works well without symptoms until it doesn't.
 
Can you show your lab analysis. If it's a brand new engine the break in metals like iron and others will be high naturally so 0w-8 can't be blamed too fast though you can still use thicker now.
 
If the 0W-8 is proven by uoa to be insufficient, you need a rebuild. That's the danger of running thin oil, it works well without symptoms until it doesn't.
Running ultra thin requires everything be perfect. Coatings and bearing tolerances at 20 microns iirc makes it possible. Not every engine will be perfect and not every defect is caught. But extra viscosity can band aid slightly out of spec coatings or tolerances as long as it isn't too much and make an engine that might be wearing too much not wear much anymore and stay that way.

However this seems like a break in oil change so metals will be high.


Clearances if anyone is interested.
http://zatonevkredit.ru/repair_manuals/raw_content/AWH2bax9U9h2CeTmXMJZ
 
Isn't it the same A25A-FXS engine they have been using since 2018?
The same.

The most paradoxical engine design in history apparently. One can’t use thinner oils because it’ll wear out prematurely. But one also can’t use thicker oils because the ECU and oil pump will not tolerate it. So we’re just left with use no oil I guess.
 
The same.

The most paradoxical engine design in history apparently. One can’t use thinner oils because it’ll wear out prematurely. But one also can’t use thicker oils because the ECU and oil pump will not tolerate it. So we’re just left with use no oil I guess.
Is that the electric oil pump?
 
It’s a 2025 engine. I just wonder about the various things they may have changed to accommodate the thin oil. Variable valve timing, oil pump pressures and things like that. Toyota always seems to speak with forked tongues. You can used 0w-16 for one oil change if you can’t find 0w-8 but you must go back to 0w-8 at the next oil change. Then they say if you use your car under high temperature or extreme conditions a thicker oil viscosity may help protect your engine better. Talk about misleading statements.
 
It’s a 2025 engine. I just wonder about the various things they may have changed to accommodate the thin oil. Variable valve timing, oil pump pressures and things like that. Toyota always seems to speak with forked tongues. You can used 0w-16 for one oil change if you can’t find 0w-8 but you must go back to 0w-8 at the next oil change. Then they say if you use your car under high temperature or extreme conditions a thicker oil viscosity may help protect your engine better. Talk about misleading statements.
Or if you move your engine to Australia you can use totally different oils. Must be the Coriolis effect messing with the oil pump.
 
It’s a 2025 engine. I just wonder about the various things they may have changed to accommodate the thin oil. Variable valve timing, oil pump pressures and things like that. Toyota always seems to speak with forked tongues. You can used 0w-16 for one oil change if you can’t find 0w-8 but you must go back to 0w-8 at the next oil change. Then they say if you use your car under high temperature or extreme conditions a thicker oil viscosity may help protect your engine better. Talk about misleading statements.
Moronic bean counter epa guidelines. Read this post I made and click the document that's meant for manufacturers like Toyota and others. In summary they can't recommend what they didn't test with but they can with some minor exceptions but still can't recommend it but can... You can use 30 grade all day no matter the odo.

 
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