now i know this may seem like a silly question, but i have always gone by what the oil bottle said, and i was fine.. but recently some of my mates have brought up very good point, and now i'm just confused!!
take for example..
a 15w 50 and a 14w 40 oil..
15 meaning the cold start viscosity, and 50 meaning the operating temp viscosotiy, from what I have read, and people have said.. 15 is thicker than 50..as the 15 is used on a cold crank, thicker oil will create more oil pressure there for reaching the top of the motor quicker etc..
so why the hell would a 10w 40 (same SAE grades) be insanely thin and blow through rings and create massive valve train noise as if the oil was just tooooo thin?? If going by what the book says… the lower the number the thicker the viscosity right??
Just incase people were wondering Ambeint temp would be around 25-27deg C so both oils would be fine working in an average engine..both oils are same brand and both synthetic blend
Am I missing something here?? Physics proves that pretty much all liquids thin out as the temp increases...especially oils..
i'm just confused now with this over load on info...
Matty