โApr-30-2015 11:25 AM
โMay-28-2015 07:07 AM
Oldme wrote:
Ford Oil
By vehicle year
โMay-19-2015 08:04 PM
โMay-19-2015 07:47 AM
427435 wrote:
Sorry to hear of your expensive problem.
I think the next time I change oil on the Explorer or MH, I will pull a sample and send it to Blackstone labs.
โMay-16-2015 08:12 PM
โMay-16-2015 06:44 PM
427435 wrote:
Relative to the cam tensioners, I don't believe they are very sensitive to oil pressure. Looking at their design, they appear to just be something to minimize chain slap. Regardless, they do their job at relatively high oil viscountcies during the 20 minutes or so that it takes for oil to reach it's operating temps and minimum viscosity.
Anyway, I'm at 80,000 miles on the V10 and 120,000 miles on a 4.6 (similar cam tensioners) in my toad without issues. They've always had at least a 5w-30 oi in them and, in the case of the MH, at least a 5w-40. The V10 also has around 30,000 miles with a 15w-50. Prior to that, I had a 4.6 in a Grand Marquis that was still running fine at 175,000 miles. It also never saw any oil less than a 5w-30 viscosity.
โMay-15-2015 09:48 PM
โMay-14-2015 08:39 AM
427435 wrote:Wes Tausend wrote:427435 wrote:
A 5w-20 oil is no thinner at, say 0 degrees, than a 5w-40 oil. They both meet the viscosity requirements for a 5w oil at cold temps. And a 5w-40 oil is far thinner at operating temp than either 5w-20 or 5w-40 is at start up temps.
The person that said the 5w-20 oils are for improved mpg is spot on.
True about the 5w's being about the same cold, cold pouring no different. Not so with 10w30 etc.
But one must rethink about the so called 20 wt mpg factor. Since the 5w20 oil is thinner than the 5w40 at high temps, it flows(leaks away) faster. The pre-set pump torsional load force remains about the same (30-40# oil bypass) and more hot 20 weight is ultimately pumped through bearings in volume, than hot 40 weight. Basically the comparable hp parasitic drag of pumping either oil ends up about the same when hot, so the "claimed marketing" mpg gain of 20 becomes basically moot.
The Ford Triton engines pressurize the RH cam tensioner only after the oil has traveled from the front pump all the way to the rear of the engine, up to the RH head and forward all the way to the RH tensioner piston. The revised 20 weight oil better maintains more even pressure over this long passage than heavier oil. Oil pressure over lengthy passageways drops just like long, small garden hoses drop sprinkler pressure furthest from the supply. Ford has had some minor issues with the RH cam and RH tensioner over this long oiling path and 5w20 helps solve it. (The V-10 is longest of all.) Of course they are not going to advertise this.
I haven't seen it done, but I imagine installing a custom direct oil line, pump-to-the-front of the RH cam, would be a good performance durability mod. The LH head already oils this way. With no distributor shaft cam drive, the Triton oil pump is totally forward, keyed on the crank snout right in front of the 1st main bulkhead, not set back (centered-like) nearer the 2nd main web like older Ford engine designs, or 3rd web like early GM.
Wes
...
Yes, 10w-30 will be thicker than a 5w-30 at cold temps.
As for pressure drop to the tensioners, that's only true if there is significant flow. There isn't as the tensioners don't require much flow.
In any event, those tensioners have to work with oil much, much thicker during cold starts. The chart below is informative when you look at how little difference between different weight oils at 200 degrees despite lots of difference at cold temps.
โMay-13-2015 08:10 PM
Camper Ken wrote:
Another vote for doing what Ford recommends. In my case 5W-20 synthetic blend. Why try to second guess the recommendation? I've never understood why some decide what's best themselves.
โMay-13-2015 06:36 PM
โMay-12-2015 01:55 PM
hanko wrote:dodge guy wrote:bigbaddad wrote:
In 2009 at Hershey I asked the Ford guys why the 5-20 as opposed to the 10 - 30 I had used in general for many years. They smiled, said they loved all the stories they heard, but for the V10 it was mainly needed for engine tolerances which were tighter than in the past.
So they secretly got ahold of all the engines that required 5 or 10W30, pulled the motors and tightened up the tolerances then told everyone to start using 5W20? That is very good of them!
You drive a Chrysler product and wouldn't understand tight tolerances. They need straight 50 wt
โMay-12-2015 12:33 PM
dodge guy wrote:bigbaddad wrote:
In 2009 at Hershey I asked the Ford guys why the 5-20 as opposed to the 10 - 30 I had used in general for many years. They smiled, said they loved all the stories they heard, but for the V10 it was mainly needed for engine tolerances which were tighter than in the past.
So they secretly got ahold of all the engines that required 5 or 10W30, pulled the motors and tightened up the tolerances then told everyone to start using 5W20? That is very good of them!
โMay-12-2015 09:51 AM
โMay-11-2015 08:51 PM
WILDEBILL308 wrote:427435 wrote:bigbaddad wrote:
In 2009 at Hershey I asked the Ford guys why the 5-20 as opposed to the 10 - 30 I had used in general for many years. They smiled, said they loved all the stories they heard, but for the V10 it was mainly needed for engine tolerances which were tighter than in the past.
While the tolerances are tighter, the MINIMUM clearances are not.
With improved machining that provide tighter tolerances, the maximum bearing clearance will be smaller, not the minimum clearance.
The reasons they smiled was that they weren't going to tell you it was about CAFE mpg.
You can try to spin this any way you want. We are not talking machining tolerances. Yes I know the difference. We are talking about the oil gap between the bearings. The V10 rod Bering gap is from 0.0011 to a maximum of 0.0023. Now given that the oil is a major contributor in keeping the lower end cool and you need a fairly good rate of flow to accomplish this why would you insist on not using the right oil. I would be using Mobil 1 0-20 if it was my engine.
Now can you tell me how many thousandths those numbers represent?
Bill
โMay-11-2015 07:36 PM
427435 wrote:bigbaddad wrote:
In 2009 at Hershey I asked the Ford guys why the 5-20 as opposed to the 10 - 30 I had used in general for many years. They smiled, said they loved all the stories they heard, but for the V10 it was mainly needed for engine tolerances which were tighter than in the past.
While the tolerances are tighter, the MINIMUM clearances are not.
With improved machining that provide tighter tolerances, the maximum bearing clearance will be smaller, not the minimum clearance.
The reasons they smiled was that they weren't going to tell you it was about CAFE mpg.