Wouldn't meet as they aren't good enough.
Just as well I change my oil every 6000 miles not 20,000 then

Wouldn't meet as they aren't good enough.

Just as well I change my oil every 6000 miles not 20,000 then![]()
[TW]Fox;21885676 said:Simon, you are talking rubbish. It's all about the age and type of car.
You might need special oil for your fancy brand new Audi but if the same engine is in a Skoda in 10 years time then its just a 10 year old Skoda and Tesco Value Oil is fine for it, its not a race car!
1. Bearing is a very generic term, there are big end bearings, main bearings which generate their own oil pressure to support the load from the pistons via conrods. This relies on the oil being supplied at the right flow rate and having the correct properties under pressure, if not the bearings will pick up (spun bearings), this is further complicated when you start introducing fuel and water into the sump thinning the oil out causing break down under high cylinder BMEP (torques)
Small end bearings are very much a metal on metal lubricant regime (Known as boundary lubrication). Camshafts and camshaft bearings also are under massive pressure where oil films break down.
You seem to have not even thought about :
Detergent performance, keeping engines clean and neutralising acids
Dispersants for controlling soot and sludge
Oxidation performance of the base oils /anti oxidants for controlling
Viscosity growth / oil consumption due to light end volatilty.
Shear stability of viscosity modifiers to avoid viscosity drop.
Pistons and piston rings, at ring reversal points there is metal to metal contact, turbo charger bearings at start up, engines with cooler temperature running where normal ZDDPs dont work. Cylinder liner wear needs to be controlled - need to stay round and polish free to maximise the performance (and emissions) of the engine, as well as avoid high oil consumption for the driver.
This isnt even going into the details of each industry and OEM test. Here you can have oils that just pass a 120 micron wear limit claim the same spec as the oils that get <10 microns. Certainly not the same performance despite the same basic spec.
2 OEMs have specifications for a reason, put a non VW 505 01 oil in an engine with Unit injectors and pretty soon you will have no camshaft left - I have seen it. Put the wrong viscosity in a high tuned engine and the big end bearings spin. Put the wrong oil in another car and the timing chain wears out. Put the wrong oil in another and the yellow metals corrode.
3 Oils of the same type is ok - but my definition of type in the additive technology used, sometimes you can mix oils which causes a large increase in the viscosity at cold. Salcylates or phenate soap in the oil? No consumer can tell this. Whilst there are tests to ensure oils are compatibile it doesnt mean you are getting the best from the oil from mixing them.
One example - High Ash 5W-30 cant be mixed with a mid ash 5W-30, they could carry similar specs (this is being driven out of the market by ACEA) but the high ash oils are not suitable for diesels with DPFs.
Another one - you can have two API SN oils of a 5W-40 with very different specification profiles, one suitable for a BMW, the other not but by assuming its fine to mix 5W-40s you could run into issues on N42 Valvetronic engines.
I cant really comment for the OP as I dont know what oil he bought, what specs or brand.
PS - none of this is cut and paste so please accept apologises for typos
Specifications have minimum limits, you can scrape passes on oils that arent even the oils you sell but support the oils on the shelf. Or you can pass them by a large amount. The real challenge - evident in this thread - is education customers on the differences and building marketing storys they can understand.


I would assume that almost all manufacturers will go down similar routes longer term if they aren't already, before they are forced into electric vehicles.Its a pain in the backside nowadays half our store room is now taken up with different oils.
bring back the glory days of 10w40 in everything.
I bet most engines would be fine on 10w40 unless thrashed to within an inch of their life.

Another myth. This isnt aimed at you but more of a General comment. Changing poor oil more frequently than good oil is not better for the engine
there is no benifit using special oils as they get rebuilt end of every raceis that because its free?
bring back the glory days of 10w40 in everything.
there is no benifit using special oils as they get rebuilt end of every race

How so?

Amen to that, but I think those days are well and truly gone.
Once the petrol runs out things will probably get a lot simpler.
Why would OEM put in thick oil and lose out on Fuel economy benefits ??

Well let's bring back the glory days of black and white tv and teletext too
Well to some people fuel economy isn't the most important reason for buying a car, so each to their own, they are hardly comparable to B&W TV.