5.7 Chevy Engine Questions

CCI

Joined
Jul 15, 2009
Messages
405
Location
New Mexico USA
1994 Chevy 2500 with 202,785 miles.

What should the oil pressure be at operating temperature highway speeds?

What's a good oil to run in an engine of this type and age?
 
I think it’s going to vary quite a bit depending on wear. 40-60psi would be fine. Pretty much any oil from a 30-50wt. Maybe tailor the weight to the oil pressure and application
 
It should definitely be around 40.
LOP at idle when hot also indicates issues, maybe with loose bearings, bearing wear.
Still it can run for years like that, until it doesn't.
 
Gauge says 30 psi at highway speeds, operating temperature. No idea if gauge is accurate.

Just bought it. It has a bit of a knock at cold startup that goes away quickly and it feels a little more like a 4.8 going up hills but it runs fairly well for its age.

I will try a 10w-40 and a new filter and see how it does.

Thank you all for the response.
 
The startup knock is probably piston slap which is very common when a SBC (or most V8s) gets some miles on it. Not a huge deal. The pistons swell a bit as they warm up and the noise goes (mostly) away.

40 grade oil is a good choice.
 
Gauge says 30 psi at highway speeds, operating temperature. No idea if gauge is accurate.

Just bought it. It has a bit of a knock at cold startup that goes away quickly and it feels a little more like a 4.8 going up hills but it runs fairly well for its age.

I will try a 10w-40 and a new filter and see how it does.

Thank you all for the response.
Noise on startup that goes away might be piston slap. Which is much better than a rod knock.
 
I've got a 1990 C1500 with the same engine and similar mileage , I run 15w40 in mine. Hot oil pressure on mine at idle is around 46 psi and around 70 psi at highway speed based on a mechanical gauge and not the 35 yr old factory gauge.
 
Piston slap was more of an issue for the earlier Gen3 (4.8/5.3) engines, not so much for the outgoing Gen1's (5.0/5.7).
Agreed. I have never seen or heard of piston slap on the SBC. LSx, definitely, especially the earlier ones like the LS1/LS6, and the 4.8/5.3/6.0 engines derived from the LS1.
 
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