Originally Posted By: HangerHarley
Originally Posted By: qdeezie
I saw an absolute steal of a deal today on Quaker State 5w-20 Synthetic Motor Oil and I thought about maybe stocking up on it and using it during the winter. My thought is that because the engine is a flat tappet stock 302 engine, that might not be a good idea. What are your thoughts?
I do hope the experts come and give us other examples and years of a "Flat Tappet Engine" because I have heard this term before, and I always thought "2000ppm of ZDDP" and 20W-50 were what "Flat Tappet Engines" needed.
Then they have "Roller Tappet" engines and what also is a "Yank tank?"
Its hard to elaborate on how thin or thick an engine needs if one does not know what a "Flat Tappet Engine" needs.
Some of those older engines needed thicker oil BY DESIGN and were Specd for thicker stuff, if not from the manufacturer, than a performance builder company, like Foose or Roush or AC Schnitzer.. Were those Flat Tappet engines?
I don't know how much difference this would make when you compare these newer, much smaller higher revving engines to the older far bigger, slower revving engines but it seems to me that the old V-8's such as the 480 ci engine in my car have much larger, heavier components in them. Compare a 302 Ford to a Yaris engine. It's HUGE in comparison.
Maybe those bigger parts need a thicker oil film due to the fact that the pistons and everything else just weigh so much more when they are flying around in there. Then there are the tolerances and the far more precise machining of the parts in this day and age. Different metallurgy which dissapates heat better than solid cast iron and far more aluminum and plastic composites with better cooling systems.
I would NEVER enertain the thought of putting a 5-20 weight in my engine unless I was living up in Alaska and even then I wouldn't. I'd just plug it in somewhere. I live where it gets down to 10 degrees in the winter and the thought of a 5-20 has never crossed my mind. A STRAIGHT 20 maybe but not a 5-20. What happens when it starts shearing? Then you don't even have your 20 wt.
The problem with the real thin stuff to me is that it's great when you just starting it up but once the engine gets to 190-200 degrees you have nothing in there but water. On a new, modern engine designed for clipper oil yes. On an old V-8? I don't think so.