What is "German Castrol."

Status
Not open for further replies.
Originally Posted By: bobbydavro
Why does it matter where it's made 'GC' is the same whether it's made in Germany,Belgium or North Korea


LOL North Korea.

lol.gif
thumbsup2.gif
 
The "original" German Castrol was 0W30.
Castrol came out with a 0W40 which was made in Belgium.
Production has switched between the two oils ( or that's what is labled on the bottles and jugs) and 0W40 is now made in Germany and 0W30 is now made in Belgium.


Got it?...clear as mud eh? LOL
 
Originally Posted By: Gokhan
Originally Posted By: buster
Originally Posted By: bobbydavro
Why does it matter where it's made 'GC' is the same whether it's made in Germany,Belgium or North Korea

LOL North Korea.

lol.gif
thumbsup2.gif


Apparently the highest-quality synthetic oil in the world is made in North Korea, using the WTL (wood-to-liquid) technology.

http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/plugged-in/how-north-korea-fuels-its-military-trucks-with-trees/


I have a feeling if GC was made in N. Korea it would be a lot different LOL.
 
Originally Posted By: Merkava_4
Originally Posted By: Nickdfresh
I think he's referring to the fact that many have said that a synthetic 10W-30 is essentially a monograde oil very close to a SAE30 weight...


What ? 10W-30 synthetic is like a monograde without viscosity index improvers ? Seriously ?
bewildered.gif



I believe I've seen it stated more than once and have heard it elsewhere. I think maybe Pablo said as much, but I'm not sure about that. There maybe some negligible VI, IDK..
 
Originally Posted By: Scum_Frog
The "original" German Castrol was 0W30.
Castrol came out with a 0W40 which was made in Belgium.
Production has switched between the two oils ( or that's what is labled on the bottles and jugs) and 0W40 is now made in Germany and 0W30 is now made in Belgium.


Got it?...clear as mud eh? LOL


Except original Belgium Castrol was 5W40.
 
Originally Posted By: buster
Originally Posted By: bobbydavro
Why does it matter where it's made 'GC' is the same whether it's made in Germany,Belgium or North Korea


LOL North Korea.

lol.gif
thumbsup2.gif



WE used ta laugh at "made in japan" in 1960s now some the best cameras such as canon and Nikon. seiko watches come from there.
 
Originally Posted By: Nickdfresh
Originally Posted By: Merkava_4
Originally Posted By: Nickdfresh
I think he's referring to the fact that many have said that a synthetic 10W-30 is essentially a monograde oil very close to a SAE30 weight...

What ? 10W-30 synthetic is like a monograde without viscosity index improvers ? Seriously ?
bewildered.gif


I believe I've seen it stated more than once and have heard it elsewhere. I think maybe Pablo said as much, but I'm not sure about that. There maybe some negligible VI, IDK..

Edge 10W30 A5B5 may have negligible VII ....... however US Edge/Syntec 10W30 surely has (more) VII's.
27.gif
 
Originally Posted By: 4WD
And Made in USA too hard to find


The Germans Belgians and North Koreans are probably also of the same mindset and believe if its made elsewhere it must be better and are looking out for this made in the USA Oil.

Hoping this made in the USA Oil is imported it into their own countries.
 
Last edited:
Originally Posted By: Merkava_4
Originally Posted By: Nickdfresh
I think he's referring to the fact that many have said that a synthetic 10W-30 is essentially a monograde oil very close to a SAE30 weight...


What ? 10W-30 synthetic is like a monograde without viscosity index improvers ? Seriously ?
bewildered.gif



Sure- why not? Synthetic oils already have pretty high viscosity indices to begin with, so it's not at all inconceivable that an oil that meets the operating temperature 30 weight standard might also meet the 10w standard at cold temperatures without any assistance from viscosity improvers.
 
Last edited:
Thanks - I read some sheets - looks like a [censored] for stout syn -
started using Delvac synthetic gear oil - industrial strength stuff ...
 
I would consider their gear lube, too, but the quantities are a little large. It's easy to change the differential fluid on the G37, with a drain plug and all, but I would have to be pretty OCD to go through a 5 gallon pail of the stuff.
wink.gif
 
RegDunlop said:
That is to say if I want to buy it TODAY, which version of castrol is "German Castrol."

I understand it to be a thick 30 weight sold as 0w-30?

Is that correct? And which bottle is it in?

Would it be good for a 97 jeep 4.0? [/quote/]
German Castrol poured green, smelled like gummi Bears, produced great UOAs and was made by Elves in the Schwarzwald. Alas it no longer exists. Except in my stash of course but I am running out
 
Originally Posted By: bobbydavro
Why does it matter where it's made 'GC' is the same whether it's made in Germany,Belgium or North Korea


Nay nay and nay. Fouler words have seldom been spoken.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom