Will Thinner Oils Damage Your Engine?

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Of course not. It's a high performance engine. No manufacturer that produces high performance engines recommend 0W20 in their engines.

I'd say there are some pretty high HP/CI engines (with good oil coolers) out there that spec xW-20 for CAFE purposes. And some manufactures (where CAFE dosn't exist) spec or at least say that it's fine to run thicker oil than xW-20 in low performance engines.
 
That's interesting. Two winters ago, I ran a certain Castrol 5W-30 in Wisconsin's -20 degree weather and found it performed terribly. As much as I like the oil in warmer weather, it didn't impress me in the cold.

I switched to QSUD and Rotella GT for wintertime ops, becoming satisfied with their performance.
Extreme cold is one of the reasons why synthetic lubricants originated (the others were extreme heat and lack of crude oil).

Manufacturers of synthetics like Emery Industries' diesters (which became Hatco) formulated motor oils - in Emery's case "Frigid Go" - that would flow in extreme low temperatures since they lacked paraffins and could be more readily tailored.

The Big Debate Over Synthetic Oils For Your Car

They also took some of the load off batteries when starting and provided better lubrication to engine bearings while the engine warmed up.
 
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I think the answer is, who really knows for sure. How many people keep their vehicle long enough to experience any engine mechanical problems?

Many people on this forum have stated that their particular vehicle has over 300K running a quality 5W-20 with no issues. Is this because of a great engine design that has nothing to do with oil viscosity or that 5W20 protects the engine adequately?

My 14 Mustang GT calls for 5W-20 and is what I currently run in it. Other versions of this car that are more track oriented spec 5W-50. Obviously I could probably run either viscosity or anything in between and be good. If I don't track my car or run it hard, will these higher viscosity oils make the engine last longer? I have not seen any evidence anywhere that it will.

Agree! Bottom line, if your vehicle is spec'd for xW20, use a good quality synthetic xW20 and don't worry about engine damage. It's been nearly 20 years since 5W20 was introduced. Probably going to take another 20 years for old folks (or they will be dead by then) to accept that a full synthetic xW20 will not damage your engine if it is spec'd to run xW20. I reiterate FULL SYNTHETIC. Not that BS synthetic blend.
 
There's a difference between "damage" and more long term wear. But if an engine was pushed extremely hard for a long period of time with too thin oil due to extremely elevated oil temperature it certainly could get "damaged". That's why I like a little more MOFT headroom than not by bumping up the viscosity (ie, xW-20 to xW-30).
 
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Agree! Bottom line, if your vehicle is spec'd for xW20, use a good quality synthetic xW20 and don't worry about engine damage. It's been nearly 20 years since 5W20 was introduced. Probably going to take another 20 years for old folks (or they will be dead by then) to accept that a full synthetic xW20 will not damage your engine if it is spec'd to run xW20. I reiterate FULL SYNTHETIC. Not that BS synthetic blend.

5W20 conventional will provide the same protection if it meets the specifications of the engine.

Also, 5W20 has been out a lot longer than nearly 20 years.
 
I believe it is relevant to his post, because HP engines can survive on 0W oils for hundreds of miles at high RPM's. In regard to ordinary folks driving ordinary cars, a new 2020 Mustang GT specifies 5W20.

I really don't need your teaching on street vs strip oil. I build, race, and drive many vehicles both on and off road. Please let me know if you have any questions on those topics and I'd be happy to help you.
 
Unless you tow a trailer, drive in extreme heat, beat the engine, drive at very high speeds, in which case you may want to up it to an XW-30 or even an XW-40.

I have a Toyota Tundra that calls for 0W20. I live in South Texas and and do a lot of towing. UOAs showed no issues. This truck has an 8.5 oil sump and an oil cooler. Do not see a reason to go to xW30 or xW40. To each their own. It's your vehicle and your $$$$$. Do what helps you sleep at night but running 0W20 will not damage your engine.
 
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.
Interesting, do you know which engines?

I think i posted in another thread (or maybe this one) that Ford Australia updated the owners manual (3rd revision) for the 2015 Mustang to change the 5.0 oil from 5w20 to 5w30. I wonder if this was in response to what you mentioned, or if it was exactly what you mentioned.
 
I've towed across the country on 5W20 conventional, with a max load, at 80 MPH, up the Ike Gauntlet, with NO engine damage.
Is this quantifiable? (no damage part) or based on UAO?

Also, another question, i know for Blackstone at least, their UOA "is it good or is it bad" is basically based on their past results, the history and averages of previous oil tests - my thoughts there being, is it possible that if everyone running (for arguments sake) 5w20 on an engine that specifies it, the UOA's will all show "OK" because everyone's wear averages will be similar.
 
I believe it is relevant to his post, because HP engines can survive on 0W oils for hundreds of miles at high RPM's. In regard to ordinary folks driving ordinary cars, a new 2020 Mustang GT specifies 5W20.

"survive on 0W oils" is a bit off since that's the cold rating, so it depends more on the hot viscosity.

From the 2018+ Owner's Manual about track use. Sure, xW-20 is OK for relatively benign use (still may result in more long term wear), but higher viscosity is needed/recommended for increased MOFT when the engine is pushed hard - for obvious reasons.

2018+ Mustang Oil for Track Use.JPG
 
Interesting, do you know which engines?

I think i posted in another thread (or maybe this one) that Ford Australia updated the owners manual (3rd revision) for the 2015 Mustang to change the 5.0 oil from 5w20 to 5w30. I wonder if this was in response to what you mentioned, or if it was exactly what you mentioned.

That may have been the 4.0L V6 and perhaps earlier OHV 3.0L's?

I'd be surprised if Ford recommended 5W30 for any 5.0L Coyote, especially one year only. I find that modern Mustangs and F series control oil temps very well! Please let us know if you find a document on that.
 
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I'd be surprised if Ford recommended 5W30 for any 5.0L Coyote, especially one year only. I find that modern Mustangs and F series control oil temps very well! Please let us know if you find a document on that.
I didn't check other years, i check the first year for the "international Mustang" and thus the same 5.0 engine in my F150 (albeit tuned differently) and it's in Ford's own downloadable owners manual, there are 3 revisions on Ford Australia's website and in the 3rd revision, the 5.0 oil spec changed from 5w20 in the first two revisions, to a 5w30 specification in the current/3rd revision.

For what it's worth, there were pretty reasonable changes to the 5.0 in 2018, so not a good comparison for following years.
 
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