edyvw
$50 site donor 2025
Originally Posted by Imp4
To be clear, no one should ever put an oil into an engine if the oil does not maintain the proper specifications or approvals.
Full stop.
The only thing I'm agreeing with Gokhan on is that one should not use the Lubrizol tool to cross compare across specifications, i.e. VW specs to Dexos, ACEA to API, MB to Dexos, etc......
Full stop.
Again, there are a thousand ways to measure relative performance between industry or manufacturer specifications. The Lubrizol tool is not one of those ways. At least according to Lubrizol it isn't.
Maybe some members here know more about Lubrizol's tool than Lubrizol does. Hey, you never know, right?
Cheers!!!
Lubrizol provides additives to oil manufacturers. They know exactly what each specification consist of.
It provides minimum requirements set up by manufacturers, and that explains a lot!
To be clear, no one should ever put an oil into an engine if the oil does not maintain the proper specifications or approvals.
Full stop.
The only thing I'm agreeing with Gokhan on is that one should not use the Lubrizol tool to cross compare across specifications, i.e. VW specs to Dexos, ACEA to API, MB to Dexos, etc......
Full stop.
Again, there are a thousand ways to measure relative performance between industry or manufacturer specifications. The Lubrizol tool is not one of those ways. At least according to Lubrizol it isn't.
Maybe some members here know more about Lubrizol's tool than Lubrizol does. Hey, you never know, right?
Cheers!!!

Lubrizol provides additives to oil manufacturers. They know exactly what each specification consist of.
It provides minimum requirements set up by manufacturers, and that explains a lot!