I want more “r” !Volume vs pressure.
That’s the simplest way to answer the question. Boyle’s law. Do you want more volume, or higher pressure?
Both. I want my cake and to eat it too.Volume vs pressure.
That’s the simplest way to answer the question. Boyle’s law. Do you want more volume, or higher pressure?
You're looking at this too literally.New take on the thick vs thin discussion... kinda hard to keep oil at ambient temperature when the coolant (and rest of the block) is well above that.
My recollection is that, for Ford's Ecoboost development, they were taking the engine, under load, and letting it warm up to good and hot. Then somehow changing coolant from 100C or whatever to like -40C so as to shock the block. Don't recall if they did likewise for engine oil.You're looking at this too literally.
Both. I want my cake and to eat it too.
New take on the thick vs thin discussion... kinda hard to keep oil at ambient temperature when the coolant (and rest of the block) is well above that.
Your antiwear package won’t really work until it hits 160-180f anyways.
You’re not running a straight R&O oil.
Considering the Coyote spec'd both 5W-20 and 5W-50 depending on whether you had the "Track Pack" option pack or not (same engine, same internals) that story sounds a bit far fetched.I'll help Op out here because I feel like his question is misunderstood... How thick is too thick of a viscosity before it's doing more harm than good.
This is a story I heard from my co-worker and fellow mechanic who is also a thickie... allegedly his elderly father took some new synthetic 20w-50 motor oil that was kicking around and did an oil change on his truck with it in the summer. Apparently a tank or two of gas later the engine had oil pressure issues, took it in to the dealership and the main and conrod bearings were discoloured and heavily worn. Not shredded, just worn and discoloured. It was either a 5.4 or 5.0 Ford in an F150.. I don't remember. He told them what happened and they helped him out by getting it covered under warranty but the reason the mechanic on the job provided the customer off the record was that apparently those engines have too tight a tolerance for such a thick oil and that 40 wt is the max they can reliably run.
I wasn't there and i'm skeptical of that reasoning but I fully trust my coworker and have no hands on experience with the engine in question so I'm not gonna comment further. Just throwing this out there of me hearing about a case of lubricant being too thick to application.
Among other things, the antiwear package does not function the same at low temps. According to journal papers, ZDDP doesn't really work well until it gets near 170 F or so.Let's assume what you are saying is true. What downsides could be caused by oil that is never at full operating temperature in an internal combustion engine?
Everything is about trade-offs.
In the world of multi-viscosity motor oil ... that being xW-8 to xW-60 ... in those grade choices the highest HTHS oil will provide the most parts separation when just looking at if from a viscosity standpoint. There is no getting around the physics that more viscosity between two moving parts results in more MOFT between them - that's the whole key to lubrication and Tribology.My point is that I read all the time here how "going thicker will never cause damage to an engine" but I don't see how that can be stated as an absolute with no ceiling. There has to be a point where the drawbacks outweigh to benefit. Imagine an oil as thick as molasses. Would that really provide more protection than a 30 grade if it can't flow freely through the bearings? It's "thick" though, so thick must mean good, right? At some point the bearin clearances won't be able to accommodate the viscosity.
And being separated by more results in more wear protection headroom. Why run on the ragged edge if you can mitigate that some. That's the whole purpose of say going up a grade for anything specified as 0W-20 or less.Being separated by a little or separated by a little more is still separated.
The only parts inside an ICE that are in full hydrodynamic lubrication almost all the time are journal bearings - until the HTHS gets too low and the MOFT goes to zero ... then you get excessive journal bearing wear. Everything else is in boundary or mix-lubrication realms. But higher viscosity will even help those parts some because the higher viscosity will still help provide more separaration for those parts too.f two parts are not touching between two times due to being separated completely by an oil film, there is wear occurring? Let’s exclude corrosive wear or extremely minute removal of metal from oil flowing by.
Getting the volume to the parts needing lubrication is the key ... the PD oil pump ensures that. Even parts like journal bearings don't actually need pressure to operate properly - they create their own high pressure oil wedge (their MOFT) to keep them separated just from them rotating.. The oil pressure is only there to make the oil move to the parts. In a fixed flow resistance system, it takes more pressure to make more oil flow volume. You can't have flow volume without pressure in an ICE oiling system.Volume vs pressure.
That’s the simplest way to answer the question. Boyle’s law. Do you want more volume, or higher pressure?
Yes, that story is far fetched. Most likely the issue was a lubrication problem, not the 20W-50 used in the summer.Considering the Coyote spec'd both 5W-20 and 5W-50 depending on whether you had the "Track Pack" option pack or not (same engine, same internals) that story sounds a bit far fetched.
Yes, this is exactly what I'm talking about, and Foxtrot summed it up as well. You can't just say "thick is best, you can't go too thick, thicker just means better separation of moving parts at all costs".I'll help Op out here because I feel like his question is misunderstood... How thick is too thick of a viscosity before it's doing more harm than good.
This is a story I heard from my co-worker and fellow mechanic who is also a thickie... allegedly his elderly father took some new synthetic 20w-50 motor oil that was kicking around and did an oil change on his truck with it in the summer. Apparently a tank or two of gas later the engine had oil pressure issues, took it in to the dealership and the main and conrod bearings were discoloured and heavily worn. Not shredded, just worn and discoloured. It was either a 5.4 or 5.0 Ford in an F150.. I don't remember. He told them what happened and they helped him out by getting it covered under warranty but the reason the mechanic on the job provided the customer off the record was that apparently those engines have too tight a tolerance for such a thick oil and that 40 wt is the max they can reliably run.
I wasn't there and i'm skeptical of that reasoning but I fully trust my coworker and have no hands on experience with the engine in question so I'm not gonna comment further. Just throwing this out there of me hearing about a case of lubricant being too thick to application.
But the first word in MOFT is "minimum". If the minimum oil film thickness is enough to prevent appreciable wear, then why do we need excess head-room on that minimum? It gets to a point where it's overcompensation that ultimately just provides more parasitic drag on the engine for no tangible gain, and that isn't smart tribilogy either.There is no getting around the physics that more viscosity between two moving parts results in more MOFT between them - that's the whole key to lubrication and Tribology.