I'd appreciate a logic test here.
I undertook a little experiment to compare the hot, operating oil pressure on two of my diesel engines when I switched from 15W40 to 10W30. These were a Ford 6.9L V8 diesel with 135K in a pickup and a Ford 152ci 3-cylinder diesel in a tractor with 3K hours.
With the oil at operating temp with fresh 15W40, I recorded the pressure and compared it to the nominal pressure listed by the engine manufacturer.
When I changed to 10W30, I did the same thing.
Ambient temps were approximately the same, though the tests were a year apart, and I took pains to get both engines good and hot. I used the same test gauge on both engines and for both viscosities. Both oils were Rotella-T.
The pressure was about 4-5 psi higher with 15W40 than the 10W30 on the tractor. The pressure was within a psi or two on the truck. Both engines had pressure above the specified pressure listed by the manufacturer with both oils. Here are the numbers, in the "actual" column the 15W40 is list first/then the 10W30. I hope my formatting holds!
Idle Spec RPM Spec Actual Idle Actual RPM
6.9L 10psi 40-70@2000 18/18 50/48
152ci - 40@1000 16/16 48/43
What did this tell me?
Bottom line, I think it told me I was safe for the 10W30 (which is spec'd for both engines by the way in my climate). If pressure is resistance to flow, then the utility tractor, especially, was running too heavy an oil.
What I wonder, though, is if this test would be a valid way to decide if you could drop a grade? I guess this might be more appropriate for the gassers who do that more than diesel guys but whaddya think?
I undertook a little experiment to compare the hot, operating oil pressure on two of my diesel engines when I switched from 15W40 to 10W30. These were a Ford 6.9L V8 diesel with 135K in a pickup and a Ford 152ci 3-cylinder diesel in a tractor with 3K hours.
With the oil at operating temp with fresh 15W40, I recorded the pressure and compared it to the nominal pressure listed by the engine manufacturer.
When I changed to 10W30, I did the same thing.
Ambient temps were approximately the same, though the tests were a year apart, and I took pains to get both engines good and hot. I used the same test gauge on both engines and for both viscosities. Both oils were Rotella-T.
The pressure was about 4-5 psi higher with 15W40 than the 10W30 on the tractor. The pressure was within a psi or two on the truck. Both engines had pressure above the specified pressure listed by the manufacturer with both oils. Here are the numbers, in the "actual" column the 15W40 is list first/then the 10W30. I hope my formatting holds!
Idle Spec RPM Spec Actual Idle Actual RPM
6.9L 10psi 40-70@2000 18/18 50/48
152ci - 40@1000 16/16 48/43
What did this tell me?
Bottom line, I think it told me I was safe for the 10W30 (which is spec'd for both engines by the way in my climate). If pressure is resistance to flow, then the utility tractor, especially, was running too heavy an oil.
What I wonder, though, is if this test would be a valid way to decide if you could drop a grade? I guess this might be more appropriate for the gassers who do that more than diesel guys but whaddya think?