As I have mentioned in other posts, I'm retired with 3 vehicles, so none of them get driven to a standard of high mileage. My 2018 Toyota Camry has right around 14,000 miles as I type this.I believe @billt460 has a newer Toyota that calls for 0W-16, and has the fancy Toyota sensor feedback "ECU contolled" oil pump that the Car Nut claims will "blow-up" the engine if 0W-16 is not used, lol. I bet that billt460 has never seen a check engine light for an oil pump code with the thicker oil he's used, and won't either if he runs the 0W-40. Maybe he can chime in with more info.
i can see the control logic of an ECU controlled oil pump to set troubke-codes for major oiling system issues, like extreme low or high oil pressure limits, sensor failures, etc. But not because someone used a grade or 2 higher than the specified 0W-16. Throw some of that 0W-5 Redline Racing oil in it, and it may throw a code for too low oil pressure, thinking the engine isn't getting enough oil volume.
So no, I'm not exactly the "test bed" to either confirm or deny this. But to answer your question, NO, my car has NEVER thrown a code, illuminated a "Check Engine" light, or given me any indication that it wasn't happy with increased viscosity oil. Not 0W-20, or 0W-30. This in outside temperatures ranging from 39 F in January, to 120 F in the dead of Summer.
And next Spring I will be switching to 0W-40. I don't expect any issues when I do. Again as I mentioned, when I switched to the higher viscosity oil, the best positive feedback I got was a much quieter running engine.
This especially so when I listened to it idling in the garage with the windows down at operating temperature. The thicker the oil, the quieter it runs. The difference was very noticeable. So much so, my wife commented on it the first time she drove it, after I got the 0W-16 out of it.
I believe this whole, "ECU controlled oil pump blowing up Toyota engines with thick oil", is complete nonsense. It couldn't be done. Back to my 0W-16 Fairbanks, Alaska...... 0W-40 Miami, Florida comparison.
Cold temperature start up viscosity is controlled by the weather.... Not what's on the label of the oil jug. Just think about it.
If the Toyota super computer controlled oil pump could not handle pumping "thicker oil", every Toyota dealer north of the Mason / Dixon Line would be inundated with trashed Toyota engines after the first cold snap of Winter set in. To think Toyota would equip an engine with something so silly, (assuming they even could), is totally preposterous.
It makes about as much sense as all of these stories about the government requiring ammunition manufacturers to make ammo where the primers would "go dead" after a certain date. They're not growing tomatoes or lettuce.