I am sure Valvoline Restore and Protect is coming to USA sometime soon as well. I wonder why they have not already, perhaps cannibalization concerns from the marketing department?
I meant Valvoline Restore and Protect 10W40, but failed to specifyHuh?
The North American market already has Valvoline Restore and Protect , just not the 10W-40 flavor. For the moment, that is an Australia exclusive it seems.
OMs specify higher viscosity choices for the same engines used in Oz, and many people use thicker oil there. Probably why 10W-40 Valvoline Restore and Protect isn't sold in the USA, yet. Maybe it will be to a limited degree in the future.I meant Valvoline Restore and Protect 10W40, but failed to specify
20W-50, then the ratio won't be much of the thicker oil. Use this mixing calculator.And here I was, about to cough a new Valvoline Restore and Protect thread wondering how to mix Valvoline Restore and Protect and what to mix it with, to make it 10w40, if a little bit less Valvoline Restore and Protect.
ROTELLA!!!Yes indeed, but which 20w50 ? What oil will be the least "anti-Valvoline Restore and Protect", the most "neutral" to use as a mixing base ? Questions, questions...
Valvoline Restore and Protect is a full synthetic, so any full synthetic would probably be as "anti-Valvoline Restore and Protect" as the next. The goal is to achieve the KV100 goal that you want and not diluture the Valvoline Restore and Protect any more than possible.Yes indeed, but which 20w50 ? What oil will be the least "anti-Valvoline Restore and Protect", the most "neutral" to use as a mixing base ? Questions, questions...
Yes indeed, but which 20w50? What oil will be the least "anti-VRP", the most "neutral" to use as a mixing base ? Questions, questions...
Wish they’d replace 5W-20 (most have gone 0W-20) with 5W-40I meant Valvoline Restore and Protect 10W40, but failed to specify
Yes indeed, but which 20w50 ? What oil will be the least "anti-Valvoline Restore and Protect", the most "neutral" to use as a mixing base ? Questions, questions...
Exactly! I think that oil makes even more sense for older vehicles. I have recently bought a 2003 vehicle with 100k miles on the odometer, and the first i did was buying 5w30 Valvoline Restore and Protect, as that is what that engine uses.Wish they’d replace 5W-20 (most have gone 0W-20) with 5W-40
Have: 0W-20, 5W-30, and 5W-40 (3.5 HTHS) …
Being they target older vehicles - might be stuck with 5W-20 a while
I completely agree with you on that. But Xw40 is a big market too i believe. But perhaps its fragmented into 5w,10w, etc.It is odd that Valvoline Restore and Protect comes in both 5w-20 and 0w-20 when it really doesn’t need to have a 5w-20 version at all. It’s less about the technical aspect of things and more about what the average person understands regarding an oil’s viscosity numbers. Most of us on here fully understand that 0w-20 can easily be used for applications calling for 5w-20 but most oil buyers really don’t know that and they will only grab exactly what the owners manual says. So Valvoline really had no choice but to offer it in North America in those three viscosities because that covers a huge percentage of all of their customers vehicles
Personally, I'd use Valvoline Advanced 20w-50. The Advanced is the non-EP and non-HM synthetic line and should have similar add pack strategy (less the secret ingredient) as Valvoline Restore and Protect. Advanced also has a nice 300ppm slug of moly in it.Yes indeed, but which 20w50 ? What oil will be the least "anti-Valvoline Restore and Protect", the most "neutral" to use as a mixing base ? Questions, questions...
but might consider the 5w30 for my next change, in my coyote F150, just to see how it goes.