I’m trying to learn

and I can’t find an answer to this. And I’d like to change the OP’s hypothetical just a bit: let’s compare a 0w30 to a 10w30 for my question and let’s make it 10* F outside when the vehicle starts. Both oils can flow at this temp but the 0w30 is “thinner”. Intuition tells me that 0w30 is better at startup. And this AMSOIL post supports that theory:
https://blog.amsoil.com/should-i-sw...MIyu3Vt7ekkgMVTEr_AR2FUyBMEAAYASAAEgL8ePD_BwE
But if I’m understanding this thread correctly, on cold (or any) startup; the oil pump will pump the same volume of oil even though the 10w is thicker. And then, ultimately, cold start wear/properties at my 10* hypothetical is more intrinsic to the oil itself than its *w rating. Which I think is what
@Hohn is getting at in this thread
https://bobistheoilguy.com/forums/t...00-miles-2011-gx460-1ur-fe-175k-miles.403490/
Am I understanding the concepts correctly?
If the oil is thin enough (< ~5000cP) it will flow sufficiently quickly to get your oil films re-established without excess startup wear. Until those films are established, the protection has everything to do with the additives and NOTHING to do with viscosity. Moly and your EP wear additives are what are saving you in that interim, and the viscosity is irrelevant until the oil pressure shows up and then the films are re-established.
If you have poor EP/AW additive packages, thinner viscosity can’t save you. And if you have robust EP/AW, thicker oil doesn’t hurt you to a point. (< 5000cP).
At 10F, there’s only a modest difference oil pressure rise and film establishment between 0w and 10w. You need to go significantly colder for those two grades to show a major disparity.
Keep in mind that since there’s no cold viscosity below 0w, a 0w-20 or 0w-30 will have much lower cranking viscosity when cold than a 0w-40 even though they all meet 0w. If it existed, the 0w-20 might be more like -5w or a -10w.
I was going to start a thread this morning, but it is along these same lines.
Forgive me, I don't want to "hack" this thread, so let me know if this is okay.
~
We are preparing for an ice storm and likely power outages. I have an older 5kW generator. It has Napa Full Synthetic High Mileage 10W-30 in the sump right now. If the temp drops down to, let's say, 5 F, can I still pull on the recoil rope and start it just fine? Would it be a noticeable difference if I had 5W-30 in the sump?
Second, when that generator is running, if it is under load, it runs pretty hot. Is there any protection difference between 5W-30 and 10W-30. What about if it was summer, say 90F?
Most small generators are splash lubricated so you aren’t turning an oil pump with the recoil rope. That’s why the pull start ability is about the same between 5w and 10w.
You might notice a difference just because the oil residue in the bearings and rings will be thicker, so the 10w will be harder to pull. Enough to notice, likely not enough to mean you can’t start it. Your physical strength is a factor I cannot account for.
There’s no protection difference really between 5w-30 and 10w-30 because the difference between them that would matter would be in the additives, not the common 30 grade viscosity. In theory the 10w would have a thicker base oil and slightly higher HTHS. In practice, it’s just a cheaper base oil with no real protection advantage.
The NAPA in the sump will do just fine to protect you year round.
A splash lube engine benefits from a No-VII formula. Heck, I run Valvoline VR1 20w-50 in my splash lube engines because it’s designed specifically for low foam, low friction, low detergency, etc. There’s a lot of overlap IMO between what makes a good race oil and a good small engine oil.