dnewton3
Staff member
Originally Posted By: BlueOvalFitter
Originally Posted By: KCJeep
Yes sir flow is your friend especially at start up I suggested Quaker State UD in 0w20. Isn't your vehicle spec'd for a 20 anyway? Or did I miss something?
Yes but my Ford tech friend back in FL suggested 0W30 or 5W30 synthetic. He said that the XW30 oil would stay on the upper end parts longer/better as opposed to the XW20,thus less noise at startup.
The ONLY thing that keeps oil in the lube pathways and supply circuits above the filter, after shut down, is the ADBV. How in the world can minor viscosity differences make the oil "stay on the upper end parts longer/better"? Once oil is up to temp, it is very fluid and drains fairly quickly. The difference in drain-back times between the lubes you state would be a few moments at most. If the system has the ability to drain down, it will.
Further, is it the suggestion of your buddy that synthetics resist drain back "better" than conventional oil? Ironic, is it not. Why do I ask? Here's why ...
Most folks claim that syns are "better" at start up, because they flow "better" than dino's (true at uber cold temps, but not as big a benefit for most of us normal folks). OK - if I were to accept that all syns flow "better" at all start up conditions (and I'm not saying that I do), then would not that same characteristic be a detriment at shut down, because the same property that makes a syn so easy to flow at start up would also make it flow easily at shut down? So would it not drain down "quicker"? In other words if a 5w-30 syn flows so much "better" at start up than a dino 5w-30, then would it also not flow "better" (drain back) at shut down? But your buddy is now attriubuting a characteristic that the syn can flow easier at start up, but also flow slower at shut down. MAGIC - simply MAGIC!
Dubious, preposterous, subjective garbage.
Originally Posted By: KCJeep
Yes sir flow is your friend especially at start up I suggested Quaker State UD in 0w20. Isn't your vehicle spec'd for a 20 anyway? Or did I miss something?
Yes but my Ford tech friend back in FL suggested 0W30 or 5W30 synthetic. He said that the XW30 oil would stay on the upper end parts longer/better as opposed to the XW20,thus less noise at startup.
The ONLY thing that keeps oil in the lube pathways and supply circuits above the filter, after shut down, is the ADBV. How in the world can minor viscosity differences make the oil "stay on the upper end parts longer/better"? Once oil is up to temp, it is very fluid and drains fairly quickly. The difference in drain-back times between the lubes you state would be a few moments at most. If the system has the ability to drain down, it will.
Further, is it the suggestion of your buddy that synthetics resist drain back "better" than conventional oil? Ironic, is it not. Why do I ask? Here's why ...
Most folks claim that syns are "better" at start up, because they flow "better" than dino's (true at uber cold temps, but not as big a benefit for most of us normal folks). OK - if I were to accept that all syns flow "better" at all start up conditions (and I'm not saying that I do), then would not that same characteristic be a detriment at shut down, because the same property that makes a syn so easy to flow at start up would also make it flow easily at shut down? So would it not drain down "quicker"? In other words if a 5w-30 syn flows so much "better" at start up than a dino 5w-30, then would it also not flow "better" (drain back) at shut down? But your buddy is now attriubuting a characteristic that the syn can flow easier at start up, but also flow slower at shut down. MAGIC - simply MAGIC!
Dubious, preposterous, subjective garbage.
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