![]() |
What the W means on the oil!!!
I read on a calender which is auto related, and it said that the "W" meant winter NOT weight. So if it says 10W or 20W it means 10 degrees in winter or 20 degrees in winter. I hope someone has some more info on this.
|
Re: What the W means on the oil!!!
The lower the numer the easier it flows in the winter so a 5W would flow well in winter climate's. Thats my understanding of it. Now the latter part of oil identification 30 40 50. I have now idea.
|
Re: What the W means on the oil!!!
i think the whole multi viscosity oil thery is a farse where i come from it all flows like 85-90 in the winter
|
Re: What the W means on the oil!!!
This is from Wikipedia;
Quote:
|
Re: What the W means on the oil!!!
Polymers are added to a light base oil(5W, 10W, 20W), which prevent the oil from thinning as much as it warms up. At cold temperatures the polymers are coiled up and allow the oil to flow as their low numbers indicate. As the oil warms up the polymers begin to unwind into long chains that prevent the oil from thinning as much as it normally would. The result is that at 100 degrees C the oil has thinned only as much as the higher viscosity number indicates. Another way of looking at multi-vis oils is to think of a 20W-50 as a 20 weight oil that will not thin more than a 50 weight would when hot.
Forgot, W stands for winter... |
Re: What the W means on the oil!!!
So if I change the oil in the winter, would I have to get 5W-30?
|
Re: What the W means on the oil!!!
In North Carolina? Shouldn't really be an issue.
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:08 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright 1997-2025 67-72chevytrucks.com