Maybe I have lost some translation and I apologize.
Usually, car's oil High quality have many additive in. but indeed in low quality oil you have also this kind of additives.
the worst for our clutch are anti friction additives. An oil without this kind of additive is not prejudicial for wet clutch.
Unfortunately I had this probleme on my first byke, a virago... I used the same oil than my diesel car, and I made my disk trimmed unusable... I wase obliged to change it.
The JASO norme is made to ensure that oil is good for an oil bath clutch or not by testing the frictional properties thereof. So if your clutch slips after draining or that it seems to be worn out too fast, the first thing to check is that the oil used to respond positively to the JASO standard
The latest revision of standards Jaso date of May 2011 and resumes revise JASO T903: 2006 and Jaso T904: 2006 to make only the JASO T903: 2011.
To be certified as an oil Jaso, it needs to obtain results within a certain range (eg, between 1 and 3) and in 3 tests.
At the beginning (JASO 2006) there were only 2 Jaso certifications;
- MB for oils that are not compatible with an oil bath clutch
- AD for oils that are compatible with an oil bath clutch
MA then the category has been subdivided into three categories: MA, MA1 and MA2 of which the following table:
For an oil is called MA1 and MA2 if and to what the 3 tests that the oil gets only the results of a single class (or MA1 and MA2) and if oil gets results "mixed" MA1 and MA2 of it is reclassified in the MA category.
for detail more category JASO MA, JASO MA Oil meets a red lead to a test of the MA2 category:
- The first case is an oil that got 2 results class MA1 and MA2 1 class
- The latter is an oil that has obtained 1 Income Class MA1 and MA2 2 class
in conclusion ;
If one is facing the JASO standard 2011:
Whatever happens, we can say that JASO MA oil is necessarily better than oil since MA1 responds to at least a test of the MA2 category but if you want the top, work toward a certified oil JASO MA2.
If one is facing the JASO standard 2006 (some oil is still sold under this standard)
that's the big lottery, a certified oil according to JASO MA 2006 is compared to the standard 2011 JASO be in the best of cases equivalent to an MA or MA2 but in the worst case, this might just be a simple MA1
you can have all information here :
https://www.jalos.or.jp/onfile/pdf/4T_EV1105.pdf