Originally Posted By: Luisraul924
Well I try to stick with 4.5k-5k because in the part of Texas I live in it doesn't take much wind to pick up quite the amount of dirt in the air. It's a desert climate so it's [censored] near always hot. I drive about 100 miles a day (roughly) and those aren't highway miles either. My vehicle is used for pizza delivery and I LOVE driving spiritedly
so I'm inclined (at least a little bit) to say that my vehicle lands under the "severe service" category.
Again, your cure is thicker oil. If your engine doesn't specify synthetic oil, you can run conventional 10W-40. You can also run any synthetic xW-40 with similar results. I recommend M1 0W-40 SN because it's reasonably priced, easy-to-get, and top-quality.
Hey, you can even run conventional 15W-40 (thicker than 10W-40) or 20W-50 (thicker than 15W-40) for even less oil consumption and your engine still wouldn't complain.
Don't worry about NOACK. If x in xW-y is large, NOACK will be low. For example for a typical conventional 20W-50, NOACK is 5% or less.
Well I try to stick with 4.5k-5k because in the part of Texas I live in it doesn't take much wind to pick up quite the amount of dirt in the air. It's a desert climate so it's [censored] near always hot. I drive about 100 miles a day (roughly) and those aren't highway miles either. My vehicle is used for pizza delivery and I LOVE driving spiritedly

Again, your cure is thicker oil. If your engine doesn't specify synthetic oil, you can run conventional 10W-40. You can also run any synthetic xW-40 with similar results. I recommend M1 0W-40 SN because it's reasonably priced, easy-to-get, and top-quality.
Hey, you can even run conventional 15W-40 (thicker than 10W-40) or 20W-50 (thicker than 15W-40) for even less oil consumption and your engine still wouldn't complain.
Don't worry about NOACK. If x in xW-y is large, NOACK will be low. For example for a typical conventional 20W-50, NOACK is 5% or less.