For someone to feel and correlate an engine's "sluggishness" vs oil viscosity during warm-up they would have to know exactly what the oil viscosity was every second as the oil is warming up. It would be very difficult to measure that with accurate test instrumentation, let alone just by someone's mind from what they "feel" while driving a vehicle as the oil warms up. Especially if that was done even just a day apart, let alone a whole OCI apart.I asked the question because I suspect the oil goes through more of a change in viscosity when running your truck from freezing to operating temp, than it does running at operating temp between 0w-30 and 0w-20.
In other words, in order for him to notice the car being less sluggish with a 0w-20 due to a decrease in viscosity, he'd have to notice the same increase in power as his car warms up using the same engine oil.
I doubt anybody could pass a double blind study and feel the difference (in either scenario above). Confirmation bias is probably at play here.
Let's say someone did a WOT dyno test on the same car using xW-20 and wW-30 at full operating temperature an found the xW-20 gave 255 HP instead of 250 HP (2% HP increase - probably being generous here). You think someone could feel a "sluggishness" difference if just cruising around at 50 HP or less ... that means they would have to be able to sense a 1 HP or less power difference from the driver's seat. I say no way that's really accurately possible.
Agree on the double blind study ... doubt that anybody could really even feel the difference at WOT in the driver's seat between 250 and 255 HP output.
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