Will Thinner Oils Damage Your Engine?

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I did find my owners manual terms were interesting.

For the NA engines in the F150 (2012)


Bold by Ford, not me.

If i then look at the next page, with the same info on it but for the turbo engines....



Both have the same lead up text, and same post text in their respective sections, only the bolded text is additional when mentioning the 5w20 oil Vs. nothing mentioned at all for the TT engine requiring the 5w30 oil.
Ford also changed the spec back to 5w30 on some of their engines calling for 5w20 to reduce warranty claims years ago. I read that here a few years back, it caused some interesting replies and debate, and some name calling as well.
 
That's not exactly correct. They did "meet" the pour point (which is a reported value) but what it did was to illustrate how pour point did not and does not adequately represent the low-temperature behavior of motor oils.
I recall the problem quite clearly.

The oils in question did NOT meet their pour point specs.

GM noted a large number of engine failures in the northern USA and Canada. They ran their own tests and found that several oils did not meet their pour point specs.

Consumer Reports, a major US testing magazine, ran their own tests and failed - among others - one of the Castrol oils for not meeting its pour point specification.

They also tested for shearing by running the oils through diesel injectors.

The specification change came a decade later.
 
I recall the problem quite clearly.

The oils in question did NOT meet their pour point specs.

GM noted a large number of engine failures in the northern USA and Canada. They ran their own tests and found that several oils did not meet their pour point specs.

Consumer Reports, a major US testing magazine, ran their own tests and failed - among others - one of the Castrol oils for not meeting its pour point specification.

They also tested for shearing by running the oils through diesel injectors.

The specification change came a decade later.
Thanks for joining to bring us that. No you don't recall it clearly. Besides there is no "pour point specs", it is a measured value determined through analysis and it is reported as measured. There is no specification for pour point. But there is a specification for the winter rating.

You're new?
 
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No you don't recall it clearly.
My memory is perfect. Unfortunately the material on this is 30-40 years old and so is not on-line and I don't have a scanner to share what I have.

I do see that an article by the late Albert Rossi, who worked for Exxon, shares some the research that was done on the problem:

https://www.jstor.org/stable/44467459?seq=1

The basic problem was paraffin crystallization at low temperatures in the offending motor oils.

The problem went away with the advent of synthetic oils, Group III oils, better pour point depressants, and better QC by the offending refiners.
 
I did find this summary on the February 1987 Consumer Reports article which is not on-line:

Comments on the 1987 Consumer Reports oil test

“... Most oils also passed all the low-temperature tests required in the SAE viscosity grade system, although there were sample-to-sample differences in some products. ...”

“... Four oils -- Kendall Superb 100 10W-40, Kendall GT-1 Turbo 10W-30, Sears Spectrum 5W-30 and Texaco Havoline 5W-30 -- failed low-temperature tests even when more than one sample was evaluated. Consumer Reports' auto engineers suggest you avoid those oils in extremely cold weather. ...”

“... Castrol GTX 10W-40 and 10W-30 and Exxon Uniflo 10W-30 would have been as impressive had all test samples met their viscosity-grade requirements. ...”
 
Everything on a OA is inferential, not anecdotal.

We note the unusual result, and infer from that certain possible causes.

No, that is incorrect on all points.

The OA does not and can not identify a specific source of any detected wear, it cannot quantify any amount directly attributable to and specific component and it cannot even tell when, where or how the wear is incurring.

Also, the OA is purely dependent of the sample, where, when and how it was taken as to whether it is even relevant.

That's just the reality of it. It still takes correlation by other technologies to "infer' anything with any degree of accuracy.

You may read well but its clear you have little to no actual formal training and field experience in the field.
 
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