5w-30 vs. 10w-30

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by thayerdog, Dec 20, 2005.

  1. thayerdog

    thayerdog Guest

    i own an '00 sebring 53k and was wondering which oil to use; the 10w or the 5w? i live in iowa and wanted to try Mobil 1 10w-30. this is the first time i have used syn oil. i have previously used conventional 5w-30 in this car. i just wanted to know everyones thoughts on the matter. thanks
     
    thayerdog, Dec 20, 2005
    #1
  2. thayerdog

    Richard Guest

    In cold weather 5W will pump much faster than 10W, saving considerable
    bearing and ring wear. 10W if fine for Florida and Mexico and Southern Calf.

    Richard.
     
    Richard, Dec 21, 2005
    #2
  3. thayerdog

    Marc Guest

    What Richard said, although Mobil 1 does flow freer at low temperatures than
    dino oil.
     
    Marc, Dec 21, 2005
    #3
  4. thayerdog

    Matt Whiting Guest

    I use Mobil 1 5W-30 in the winter and 10W-30 in the summer. However,
    synthetic 10W-30 will pump better at below zero temps than 5W-30 dino
    oil. So you are better off even with the 10W synthetic in the winter.


    Matt
     
    Matt Whiting, Dec 21, 2005
    #4
  5. thayerdog

    Steve Guest


    Use what the owners manual recommends for your area. The only difference
    between the two oils you mention will be the viscosity when COLD. Once
    the engine is warm, they should be identical.
     
    Steve, Dec 21, 2005
    #5
  6. thayerdog

    whitingm1 Guest

    I suck black dicks.
     
    whitingm1, Dec 22, 2005
    #6
  7. thayerdog

    Guest Guest

    Use the oil the manufacturer recommends. It expect it's 5W- in your
    winter climate.
    I'd also recommend Dura lube treatments every 30K miles or so, based on
    my many years of successful experience with it in several cars.
    Dura lube reduces that engine wearing start up friction.
    IMO synthetic oil isn't needed for ordinary legal driving in your area.
     
    Guest, Dec 28, 2005
    #7
  8. thayerdog

    Matt Whiting Guest

    It is needed much more than Duralube is needed.

    Matt
     
    Matt Whiting, Dec 29, 2005
    #8
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