I have a neighbor who has a ford focus with 285xxx miles and a f150 with 220xxx on it and its a total work truck.
For the last 20years he's used quakerstate and he mentioned something about the oil being the only oil that stays its viscosity even after the oil is due to be changed...
I was thinking about using it in my toys, I already had an old jug on the shelf and basically, the bottle says what he said, so I'm kinda second guessing his (belief)
So I guess my question is, is there something special about quakerstate oils compared to how other oils are tested? I know its cheap at wallyworld... here its a buck more then supertech lol
I getting ready to service 3 toys here in the next month or so, I might make a switch to qs or delvac but I'd like to hear some input from those much more knowledgeable in decoding engine sale hype
For the last 20years he's used quakerstate and he mentioned something about the oil being the only oil that stays its viscosity even after the oil is due to be changed...
I was thinking about using it in my toys, I already had an old jug on the shelf and basically, the bottle says what he said, so I'm kinda second guessing his (belief)
So I guess my question is, is there something special about quakerstate oils compared to how other oils are tested? I know its cheap at wallyworld... here its a buck more then supertech lol
I getting ready to service 3 toys here in the next month or so, I might make a switch to qs or delvac but I'd like to hear some input from those much more knowledgeable in decoding engine sale hype
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