OP stated his Ram 1500 is V6, which is the Pentastar 3.6L that seems fine on most any oil from what I've read.I guess whatever it takes to keep the Hemi from playing 70s SBC and eating the cam?
The oil cooler leaks however...
OP stated his Ram 1500 is V6, which is the Pentastar 3.6L that seems fine on most any oil from what I've read.I guess whatever it takes to keep the Hemi from playing 70s SBC and eating the cam?
It's a Pentastar, not a HEMI, and that problem was supposedly solved with yet another lifter revision in 2018I guess whatever it takes to keep the Hemi from playing 70s SBC and eating the cam?
It's a Pentastar, not a HEMI, and that problem was supposedly solved with yet another lifter revision in 2018![]()
Correct. Our '19 is supposed to have the updated lifters.2018+ shouldn't have lifter problems then? I may look closer at those.
The later years of that generation seem to be pretty solid trucks otherwise. Unfortunately no Pentastars in the 4th gen truck are rated to tow what I need to tow. Otherwise there's a lot of those in my price range.
Potentially better-shearing stability and higher HTHS.what conceivable benefit does any 5w-40 have over M1 0w-40?
like a real benefit that would make someone change oils? or hair-splitting?Potentially better-shearing stability and higher HTHS.
Shearing stability and higher HTHS are real benefits.like a real benefit that would make someone change oils? or hair-splitting?
He’s making Mr. May look wildAt the rate you're dumping oil any brand will suffice
Hope you are right - I’m not seeing any change in oil pressure with the M1 Supercar - and IIRC - the VVT is ECM controlled anyway …and that problem was supposedly solved with yet another lifter revision in 2018![]()
Potentially better-shearing stability and higher HTHS.
Ican and it cannot. Everything depends on how good is 0W40 or 5W40. That is why I said "potentially."Cant be. It was written here millions of times that M1 0w-40 is THE best Oil and that Porsche uses 0w-40 for a reason.
0w-40 = Racing stuff! Race proven! Porsche Proven!
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Mind if i join you![]()
The answer is not really and no one knows if the 5W is better in any respects than the 0W. You would imagine the HTHS would be slightly higher but only Mobil knows. It could be a cost reduced / higher margin product than the 0W, who knows. The only thing we know is FS 5W-30, 0W-40, 5W-40, and X2 5W-50 now all use the same Infineum additive package. I was told this directly by an engineer there and that is both unsurprising and backed up by VOAs. Personally I’d just be choosing between the 0W-40 or 5W-50 depending on use case. I was told the 0W-40 and 5W-50 could be mixed as desired to create something in-between. Not sure I see the point but hey.Has anyone taken a closer look at the Walmart available M1 5w-40 FS? Thoughts?
I've been using FS for many years. 0W-40 used to have its pour point at -60°C. It's now at -42°C which is typical for majority group III base oils. Similar story with 5W-40 and 5W-50. Corners had to be cut to keep the price from making leaps.The answer is not really and no one knows if the 5W is better in any respects than the 0W. You would imagine the HTHS would be slightly higher but only Mobil knows. It could be a cost reduced / higher margin product than the 0W, who knows. The only thing we know is FS 5W-30, 0W-40, 5W-40, and X2 5W-50 now all use the same Infineum additive package.
Additive package compatibility and solubility seem to be at least a partial driver. I doubt the old oils outperform the new versions but who knows.I've been using FS for many years. 0W-40 used to have its pour point at -60°C. It's now at -42°C which is typical for majority group III base oils. Similar story with 5W-40 and 5W-50. Corners had to be cut to keep the price from making leaps.