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mikiewest


Joined: Dec 29, 2007
Points: 262

synthetic oil
Original Message   Apr 7, 2009 7:14 pm
I was speaking to the mechanic where I bought my snowblower, and asked him about synthetic vs conventional oil.He said that regular oil would be fine.Would synthetic oil really extend the life of the engine??
This message was modified Apr 7, 2009 by mikiewest
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iLikeOrange


Joined: Nov 18, 2005
Points: 120

Re: synthetic oil
Reply #2   Apr 8, 2009 8:35 am
I posted a bit ago about using synthetic in my 1989 Ford F 150.  I change the Amzoil once a year, use the best oil filters and sometimes change those in between oil changes.The F150 does not burn a drop of oil  Not a drop.  4.9L engine @ 160 k miles. Never had an engine problem. One very important aspect of synthetic is the low temperature flow point. Really gets things lubed up right away at start up. Yeah I use it in my orange Ariens also.

mech12


Joined: Feb 20, 2006
Points: 273

Re: synthetic oil
Reply #3   Apr 8, 2009 10:11 am
  i dont see the benefit.  save your money and use sae 30w  for your summer  and 5w-30 in winter.  keep in mind  90%-95% of these engines in use are  SPLASH lubricated,  meaning the oil sits in bottom of crankcase.. there is a "dipper" bolted the the rod cap.  when this rotates around this dips into the oil and splashes it around the valve train onto the crank jurnal  etc.   IF you have a tractor with a pressurized system  or oil pump,  then use synthetic.  
borat


Joined: Nov 10, 2007
Points: 2692

Re: synthetic oil
Reply #4   Apr 9, 2009 8:10 pm
mech12 wrote:
  i dont see the benefit.  save your money and use sae 30w  for your summer  and 5w-30 in winter.  keep in mind  90%-95% of these engines in use are  SPLASH lubricated,  meaning the oil sits in bottom of crankcase.. there is a "dipper" bolted the the rod cap.  when this rotates around this dips into the oil and splashes it around the valve train onto the crank jurnal  etc.   IF you have a tractor with a pressurized system  or oil pump,  then use synthetic.  


Synthetic oils make sense in cold weather applications.  That's the only place I use it.
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