They just updated it, to the same formulaGC gold….a ghost from the past…
Do you allow for cool down time, on my RDX. 1 min minimum even slow city driving. Come hard off freeway. 3 min. M1 0/40. 3k OCINot 10k on an EJ turbo. That advice and “good uoa’s” cost me a turbo. 5k should be fine though.
The Castrol 0W-30 A3/B4 always has the biggest dose of Ti they use and no moly for whatever reason.Looks OK.
Suprised at the low moly. Maybe it's better at -0- given the piston skirt coating - assuming the EJ turbo have plasma moly skirts
Always did even though it wasn’t needed due to coolant continuing to circulate after shutdown. I did put another ~110k on the new turbo before the car was totaled.Do you allow for cool down time, on my RDX. 1 min minimum even slow city driving. Come hard off freeway. 3 min. M1 0/40. 3k OCI
In fairness, the oil screens were a known problem on all the EJ turbos, and while I get the intent, if you’re using a good oil filter, the only way the much larger screen in the oil feed line will catch anything at all is if the filter tore.Always did even though it wasn’t needed due to coolant continuing to circulate after shutdown. I did put another ~110k on the new turbo before the car was totaled.
HTHS of Castrol 0W30 is 3.58 and M1 is 3.6.In fairness, the oil screens were a known problem on all the EJ turbos, and while I get the intent, if you’re using a good oil filter, the only way the much larger screen in the oil feed line will catch anything at all is if the filter tore.
IMO there is almost zero risk of losing a turbo if one removed that inline screen. This would eliminate the chance of plugging the line and starving the turbo. About the only other way to keep the turbo happy with that screen is to use an oil with ANs & esters to continually keep the screen clean. It’s almost ironic that turbo EJs seem to prefer the HTHS of a good Xw40, and the “premier” 0w40 just happens to have an AN/Ester makeup. Of course I’m talking about Mobil 1 FS 0w40.
Yes, I did keep the screen in but was still pushing my intervals beyond Subaru's new (at the time) requirement that turbos fell under Severe Service. Even Amsoil advised to follow SoA's recommendation on their web site. I still kept the screen in after the failure because the lead Master Tech convinced me that the benefits (blocking debris) outweighed the risk.In fairness, the oil screens were a known problem on all the EJ turbos, and while I get the intent, if you’re using a good oil filter, the only way the much larger screen in the oil feed line will catch anything at all is if the filter tore.
IMO there is almost zero risk of losing a turbo if one removed that inline screen. This would eliminate the chance of plugging the line and starving the turbo. About the only other way to keep the turbo happy with that screen is to use an oil with ANs & esters to continually keep the screen clean. It’s almost ironic that turbo EJs seem to prefer the HTHS of a good Xw40, and the “premier” 0w40 just happens to have an AN/Ester makeup. Of course I’m talking about Mobil 1 FS 0w40.
Not 10k on an EJ turbo. That advice and “good uoa’s” cost me a turbo. 5k should be fine though.
Yes, other than a slight uptick in lead. This was actually a turbo with only around 20k on it.Wait, so your UOA showed everything’s fine and dandy and then outta the blue your turbo failed???
The 0w30 I pickup when it's cheap but other than that I will take the 0w40 5qt tanks at once at amazon / walmart. Keep in mind that the 0w30 did see the highest mileage interval so far so that could factor in the more pb shown.I like the 0w30 Castrol Euro. I ran it at 1yr/4500-5000 mile intervals, with results very similar to yours…though I have somewhat detuned version (2007 turbo), I have 150k on the engine.
i know edyvw loves this oil too, but actually your 0w40 results looked marginally better, especially the Pb. Assuming you’re not tracking it, or “abusing” it, I think you could settle on 1 yr intervals, given your typical use, with either Castrol oil