I can't imagine that any of these sub 20w oils have much if anything in terms of VII's.I wonder what they think about this View attachment 141836
Owning a BMW outside of a lease/warranty is typically a bad financial decision.I doubt many owners of newer BMWs will own the car long enough to matter. If you can afford a new BMW, you probably get a new one every 3-5 years anyway.
You mean other than the correlation between HT/HS and wear? Or any discussion about film thickness?What would be interesting is any actual evidence and technical data/testing that supports their reccomndation.
Without that it is just more fear mongering.
I've been here for quite a few years and I don't think I've ever seen anyone post such a thing. Maybe grinding is feared on other sites?ITT: people who think 0w-20 is going to grind down their bearings as they drive along 70mph highways and 25mph city streets.
Well typical BMW sales cycle has been lease up to 3yrs then resell as CPO for another 3-4 years. So 7 yrs on avg. Their vehicles end up at auction at around 100k-120k miles where people who can afford to repair want something newer.I doubt many owners of newer BMWs will own the car long enough to matter. If you can afford a new BMW, you probably get a new one every 3-5 years anyway.
Out of interest, how can you tell that the engine "likes it"? And how can you tell the old oil was "tired"?Seems to like it, the Pennzoil I dumped out of there seemed pretty tired.
Like = Didn't "grind down" the bearings.Out of interest, how can you tell that the engine "likes it"? And how can you tell the old oil was "tired"?
I'm genuinely not trying to argue but want to understand how people make such judgements about oils.
Because, like the OP said, the oil specifications are based on EPA and CAFE requirements, not engine requirements.I'm not going to bother to look for examples, but I recall more than a few times someone has dug up the oil vis recommendation for the same engine in Europe vs in the US. It usually shows 'thinner' oils called for in the US.
I've heard those words from numerous YouTube techs, from various automotive websites, and directly from several local techs and shop owners.Owning a BMW outside of a lease/warranty is typically a bad financial decision.
+1, almost verbatim to my thoughts.Out of interest, how can you tell that the engine "likes it"? And how can you tell the old oil was "tired"?
I'm genuinely not trying to argue but want to understand how people make such judgements about oils.
But you have to keep in mind that the primary focus is better mileage for a manufacturer's fleet. Do you think MB would actually go to a 20wt oil if not for govt mandates.While the statement is not wrong, it needs to be put into context. Would I track a B58 with 0w20? Unlikely. Would I let my wife use it in her daily driver? You bet.
I wonder what their statement will be on the 0w12.
End of the day you can trust the people who engineer and provide the warranty on the engine/car, or you can trust FCP Euro. Your choice.
You can apply this line of thinking toBut you have to keep in mind that the primary focus is better mileage for a manufacturer's fleet. Do you think MB would actually go to a 20wt oil if not for govt mandates.
And this is not because of the car, per se. New BMWs are expensive. Just because you can buy a used one for a fraction of its original MSRP doesn't mean repair costs become less expensive.Owning a BMW outside of a lease/warranty is typically a bad financial decision.
Yep, if anything, it improved BMW reliability. We’ve gone from S65 eating rod bearings with 10W-60 to coated bearings and 0W-30 in S58 (0W-20 / 12 in B58 TU2) with more power and fewer issues.You can apply this line of thinking to
Seat belts,
Catalytic converters,
Safety glass
Crumble zones
Reinforced roofs
ABS brakes
Leaded fuels
Fuel injection
Yes CAFE is the driver and engineering found a solution. That's it. The cars will still end up in the scrape heap at the same age as the "less complex" or "more reliable" models of the past.
One thing is for certain and it's that the B-series engines running 20w oils are not yet having bearing issues.