Hohn
Thread starter
I bit the bullet and decided to open the bottles and do a cold pour test after an overnight soak in my garage chest freezer.So I pulled the quarts out of the freezer and observed the clear level indicator window on each bottle with a bright light as I tilted them over. I’m not sure how to capture this on video— it’s not easy to see. I’ll see if I can grab a phone video.
There’s almost no discernible difference between them at the temp of my freezer (0-5F?) They are both thick, but they flow perfectly acceptably well for a rare cold winter start, as my freezer temps are below what my local ambient can realistically achieve with any regularity.
This seems to confirm (yet again) all the mental bias we bring in when thinking about this monograde SAE 40. It’s classic fallacy, mistaking the absence of proof (no cold rating) as proof of absence (inappropriate for cold).
As expected, the monograde is a bit thicker but still pours quite freely at about 0F temps. My freezer is more like -5F— -10f, but I’m sure the warmed slightly in the 30 seconds or so I had them sitting atop the freezer in ~45F.
This is not science, just a useful anecdotal comparison of the monograde against the 15w-40 that has been validated to temps of 15F in my personal usage.
For my purposes, this suffices to allay any lingering doubts about whether my local climate will allow the usage of this SAE 40 in my vehicles year round here in south central Indiana.