Are all full synthetic rear differential gear fluids made equal?

Are all full synthetic rear differential gear fluids made equal?
Excellent and intriguing question. Restated, 'what

1639959343566.png


does it make'?
 
Are all full synthetic rear differential gear fluids made equal?
Does all water taste the same.

They can all meet specs but they arent the same.
For example lucas got pounded in the corrosion test and it was a syn 75w90.

Stick with good brand names and and the right product for the application and you dont have to worry.

any particular reason you are asking?

IE the rear end in the 2001 f150 etc. I'd be throwing supertech in that btw.. cheap and works good.
 
No they are all different. Usually major companies products meet the specs and can be counted on.
 
Gimpy1 is right. As long as the fluid are all the same specification, the real difference is the amount of Limited Slip Additives in them. Motul has both with and w/o SL added gear fluids. The real question is what type of rear differential is on your car and what is the manufacture's specification/requirement for the differential. When in doubt, you can't go wrong with OEM fluid.

https://www.motul.com/us/en-US/products/gear-300-75w90

https://www.motul.com/us/en-US/products/gear-300-ls-75w90
 
Does all water taste the same.

They can all meet specs but they arent the same.
For example lucas got pounded in the corrosion test and it was a syn 75w90.

Stick with good brand names and and the right product for the application and you dont have to worry.

any particular reason you are asking?

IE the rear end in the 2001 f150 etc. I'd be throwing supertech in that btw.. cheap and works good.

Care to expand on the Lucas and corrosion testing part of what you posted? I’m not familiar.

It’s hard to say that one is better or worse than another without more context on the needs…. Cold flow, extended drains, etc.

Clean and fresh seems the best option. Something that lasts a long time in use like Amsoil SVG - great lube - but at what point is it not helpful because there isn’t much of a strenuous use and it just gets old and due for replacement. I use that example not to belittle Amaoil SVG. It’s my preferred lube. But in many of my cars it’s not worth running because time, not mileage or severe use will wear it out.

The question becomes how much worse is say, Supertech syn than say Mobil 1 or Valvoline synpower… or the high end lubes. Especially if not always running highly loaded and long distances in short times…
 
I think you could use any major brand that meets specs, including Supertech, and never know a difference. UNLESS you are towing heavy loads, i think thats where Amsoil, HPL, Redline etc, might be a good choice.
 
Back
Top Bottom