VOA's tell you extremely little of value about an oil. Many constituents are organic and don't show up for example. You only get a rough idea of metallic elements and even then, no information on compounds.Just put Valvoline EP into my Ram today. Love the moly numbers. Never been a Mobil 1 fan. The VOAs I’ve seen just don’t impress me. Your mileage may vary but I don’t think your vehicle will suffer.
VOA's tell you extremely little of value about an oil. Many constituents are organic and don't show up for example. You only get a rough idea of metallic elements and even then, no information on compounds.
It's like trying to determine how attractive someone is by looking at their ankles.
Have three of those rebates on my fridge door to deposit at the bank!Don’t forget about the valvoline rebate: $5 Rebate
If it's GL-5 DO NOT install it.
Edit:
I remember Valvoline making a synchromesh fluid years ago. Is this what you're talking about using?
Can you talk a little bit about why DO NOT use GL5?If it's GL-5 DO NOT install it.
Edit:
I remember Valvoline making a synchromesh fluid years ago. Is this what you're talking about using?
Nope, Valvoline is not bad at all, good oil. You really would have a hard time going wrong with any of the major lubricants on a sane interval.Never met someone with ankle partialism?
Not going to disagree with you. Appreciate the info. Still think he won’t be too far behind the curve running Valvoline. Good oil.
Diffs are typically fine, it's manual transmissions (and perhaps some transfer cases) that use metals that are not compatible with GL-5.Can you talk a little bit about why DO NOT use GL5?
I recently changed some diff fluid as well.. different application, but, I know nothing about. Differential fluid...
If I read his op correctly, he's talking about changing the standard tranny fluid? If it specs a GL4, the additives in the GL5 will cause gear clash.Can you talk a little bit about why DO NOT use GL5?
I recently changed some diff fluid as well.. different application, but, I know nothing about. Differential fluid...
I'm going to get a base level of knowledge about this from here because I really don't know anything about it besides what you're telling me.Diffs are typically fine, it's manual transmissions (and perhaps some transfer cases) that use metals that are not compatible with GL-5.
It's fine, it just means it has a friction modifier in it already so that if you have a clutch-type limited slip diff (like my wife's truck) that it shouldn't chatter and you shouldn't need to add separate FM.I'm going to get a base level of knowledge about this from here because I really don't know anything about it besides what you're telling me.
I have a car where I changed out about a quart of diff fluid, I decided to be a little bit of spending and I got the Royal Purple 75w 90 so that stuff seems to be a limited slip... not getting sidetracked on the Royal Purple part I know it's the same as every other fluid but the limited-slip part. Is the limited-slip designation something you want to avoid or is it fine in automatic transmission or what are some general
Some would say that Valvoline is just as good, if not better than M1 anyways.Short Thread, I got cheap is all that happened here$23.97 for Valvoline full synthetic 5Qt vs 29.84 for M1. As much as i love M1 i don't think it and offers five dollars+ more protection, per OCI, (that almost pays for the OEM Hyundai oil filter) so Valvoline it is for now. Its for the Hyundai/Kia 2.4L coupe that's far from picky on oil, so as long as it clean-ish and full... The last time I used Valvoline synthetic oil was an honest 15 years ago, but it never let me down, i also used Valvoline maxlife ATF red recently for the Elantra automaitic transmission, and it shifted perfect.
The perception I have on Valvoline is it's meant for old vehicles and it's kind of thick lol but im probably wrong it's just I remember that name when I first started driving, and was equivalent to a Band-Aid in a bottle for older vehicles.
Also going to change the manual transmission fluid before i put in Amsoil. So i will drain and fill transmission using the Valvoline 75W90 synthetic fluid. use for a few days until amsoil gets here, and change it again.. I called Kia dealer, and they dont have qts of 75W90, and told me just to go to autostore, and pick up 75W90 GL-4, and change it out, no special fluid required so thats what i did.
Don't get me wrong this is not a bashing thread of M1, I will still pay the premium and use it in the Sonata, and change it twice a year about every 6-7K miles per OCI. I will also change the coupes oil twice a year, but i might only have 3-5K miles on the OCI.. and OEM Hyundai filters are what i use now thanks to BITOG.
Thats where im at this am.
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