While I've stepped up in viscosity in high mile engines, it is often for reasons such as Ford's notorious leaking oil pump back plate and leaking chain tensioners on the 5.4L. Such leaks starve the cylinder head for oil and a low viscosity oil is a sure-fire way to have an engine failure.
However, we would do well to remember that chains last longest with a true 30 viscosity oil. Timing chains, balancer chains, oil pump drive chains (yes, they exist) and so on. When we move too far down from that viscosity, wear increased so much that special chain link pin coatings needed to be developed to ensure adequate life. These coatings also have a finite life and once breached, the components wear rate increases fast. The good news is that for most people, engine life is adequate.
Whether your vehicle choice has an engine with all components designed for ultra low viscosity oils or not, remains to be seen. Toyota is a solid bet. H/K, not a chance, as this is exactly where H/K cuts corners.
Here in South Florida, I never use anything less than a quality, synthetic 5W-30.
Take a look at the wear on the DLC (diamond like coating). This is an engine that spec's 0W-20, and has been configured to hold up well with that viscosity, through the use of very specialized coatings. However, what happens is that once the coatings wear off, the engine is trash. The use of significantly higher viscosity such as a robust 5W-40, prevents such wear. Period, end of story.
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