No coating is going to remove the benefits of more MOFT. The coating is there because the thinner oil has less MOFT and they need the coating to mitigate wear from lack of film thickness.And again. The coatings work synergistically with thinner oils. You're cherry picking within the cherry pick, if you will.
Here ya go ... the same PR25DD engine in the European 2023 Nissan X-Trail (same as the Rouge). Mind blowing ... she's going to blow-up with that xW-50.Yes. It's available in USA and Canada only. Same manual. PR25DD engine.

Yes they did, thinking they could sacrifice some added engine wear for more fuel economy and CAFE credits. But again, some like Ford have recently gone back up a grade, for obvious reasons.Here's the thing about that. The whole 0w-20 = bad thing started when the oil was specified as a quick hack to get mpg. Auto makers would simply change the spec on existing engines. In these cases I always opt for the heavier original spec.
Yeah, probably some "design features" even on xW-20 speced engines ... but still doesn't mean there isn't some added protection with a grade or two higher. Why do you think that Nissan OM shows all those oil viscosities in the OM when the EPA/CAFE are out of the loop.With a clean slate design well into the 0w-20 era things have changed. There are certain design features that allow 0w-20 to perform well, as you yourself mentioned. I'll go further and say there are design features of modern mpg-focused engines that require 0w-20. I presented an example of this.
No bearing is designed to have reduced clearances to "achieve the same protection". Regardless of the bearing clearance, higher viscosity gives benefits, and the temp rise is a non-issue as shown previously. There is no "hydrodynamic implication to film strength". Did you read that Machine Lubrication article in the other thread? When the MOFT goes to zero between any two moving parts, it's only the oil film strength that reduces wear from rubbing. So the hydrodynamic wedge MOFT in a journal bearing would also have to go to zero (from lack of viscosity) for the film strength to kick-in. You might want to do some research on how journal bearings really work because it seems you've got some misconceptions going on.You actually presented an argument supporting this with your link about viscosity and bearing pressures. Clearances are reduced when designing for thinner to achieve the same protection. You never explained the hydrodynamic implications to film strength.
There is no "inadequate lubrication with thicker oil" in journal bearings. Again, the example of the Ford Coyote and even the Nissan X-Trail using a wide range of viscosity. You think Nissan would put that oil viscosity chart in the OM if thicker oil caused "lack of lubrication" or any kind of engine damage. Pretty simple logic to conclude they know it doesn't cause any "lack of lubrication" or engine harm. Instead, they know a thicker oil gives more engine protection when the ambient temps are higher which causes the oil to run a bit hotter.I'm leaning toward inadequate lubrication with thicker oil. At least verification instead of assumption, something that should be a reasonable proposition to anyone.
Yeah, you probably should ... don't want the "warranty boogie man" to get ya, lol. This is just going in circles now - Mods should probably just lock it.I'll stick to the spec. Anything else is a "nebulous" endeavor of "better" oil.
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