Originally Posted By: OVERKILL
Originally Posted By: lubricatosaurus
Otherwise, Subaru is saying the SN GF-5 based full synthetics are the ones that can go almost 4,000 miles, got to believe that.
Does Subaru spec a synthetic 5w-30? I don't believe so, I think it is just your typical 5w-30 PCMO.
For a 2015 WRX or WRX STI (turbo), Subaru says use a full synthetic of 5w-30 or 0w-30 or 5w-40 or 0w-40. I'm not sure about the other turbo Subies. That means any euro-spec 0w-40 or 5w-40 is warranty approved. Of course M1 0w-40 is a tougher oil than M1 0w-30, so my reasoning is that a 0w-40 can go longer, although Subaru doesn't bother making that distinction, they consider all oils equal. Consider 0w-40 will handle fuel dilution better as well and still have reserve viscosity left over. Any oil like M1 0w-40 that is approved for everything from Nissan GT-R's to Porsche GT3's to Audi A4's might survive in the Subie turbo models.
Originally Posted By: lubricatosaurus
Otherwise, Subaru is saying the SN GF-5 based full synthetics are the ones that can go almost 4,000 miles, got to believe that.
Does Subaru spec a synthetic 5w-30? I don't believe so, I think it is just your typical 5w-30 PCMO.
For a 2015 WRX or WRX STI (turbo), Subaru says use a full synthetic of 5w-30 or 0w-30 or 5w-40 or 0w-40. I'm not sure about the other turbo Subies. That means any euro-spec 0w-40 or 5w-40 is warranty approved. Of course M1 0w-40 is a tougher oil than M1 0w-30, so my reasoning is that a 0w-40 can go longer, although Subaru doesn't bother making that distinction, they consider all oils equal. Consider 0w-40 will handle fuel dilution better as well and still have reserve viscosity left over. Any oil like M1 0w-40 that is approved for everything from Nissan GT-R's to Porsche GT3's to Audi A4's might survive in the Subie turbo models.