johnny80s
Turtle Gears
Where is Jestal when we need him?
**************************************************Yep.... I was sold long ago.Wally World has M1 15w-50 Red Top at $22 for a 5 quart jug, buy 4 and the 5th change is pretty much free. The jugs have a clear window so you can nail 4 litre change quantity at a glance. The oversize jug makes for easy mixing. Sold yet?
I never bought into using a diesel oil in a motorcycle anyway.... <_<
The only real problem here is... buying it from The Great Satan. As everyone knows, every time you buy something from Walmart, a puppy dies.
Think of the puppies before purchasing. :lol:
Pouting, I think. Still. Besides, with the info above, and his dissertation in the Bin-O-Facts, what more can be said?Where is Jestal when we need him?
About $9 a bottle at most GM dealers. You might be able to get it a little cheaper, but IIRC not a lot of wiggle room on cost of the stuff. Cam manufacturers have more or less the same thing, but it's usually even more.So how much is a 16oz bottle of EOS going for?? Available at the local chevy dealer?
...Where is Jestal when you need him?...
Been posted. READ the BLOODY THREAD MORON!!!Where is Jestal when we need him?
Well since your so smart where is he? It seems like lots of us want to know....Where is Jestal when you need him?...Been posted. READ the BLOODY THREAD MORON!!!Where is Jestal when we need him?
Wooo Hoo! It's Friday!!!
I have chatted with jestal some.Well since your so smart where is he? It seems like lots of us want to know.
Please do not listen to or follow any reccos by BMW (especially for other brands of motorcycles) -- they are NOT the paragons of reliability/dependability (by any stretch of the imagination... ).He now recommends the following oils for use in BMW's and advises against further use of Rotella T 15w-40 conventional oil.Valvoline 10w40 4-Stroke M/C Oil; $4.50/Qt; zinc level 943 ppm; phosphorus level 1112 ppm.
Mobil 1V-Twin 20w50 Full-Synthetic M/C Oil; $11/Qt; zinc level 1649 ppm; phosphorus level 1722 ppm.
BMW 20w50 Non-Synthetic M/C Oil; $7/Qt; zinc level 1951 ppm; phosphorus level 1800 ppm.
As much as I appreciate their efforts to inform, I want to dismiss the whole article when I read (from the S/R article):This is a good read! Very interesting!https://www.sportrider.com/tech/146_0308_oil/index.html
The "W" means that the oil was put through 'Winter' testing for cranking and pumpability, etc. -- which might not sound too important for motorcycles until you realize that most engine wear takes place on start-up.the "W" stands for "weight" or viscosity
Pretty insignificant....The motorcycle industry followed the ever-changing API service designations until a few years ago, when the SJ designation lowered maximum levels of certain additives used to reduce metal-to-metal friction. (The latest API designation is SL.) Specifically, the maximum allowable phosphorous content was lowered from 0.12 percent to 0.10 percent due to its negative effect on some catalytic converters.
charismaticmegafauna: Those ppm levels didn't come from BMW, Valvoline or Mobil; were direct from independent lab work.Please do not listen to or follow any reccos by BMW (especially for other brands of motorcycles) -- they are NOT the paragons of reliability/dependability (by any stretch of the imagination... ).He now recommends the following oils for use in BMW's and advises against further use of Rotella T 15w-40 conventional oil.Valvoline 10w40 4-Stroke M/C Oil; $4.50/Qt; zinc level 943 ppm; phosphorus level 1112 ppm.
Mobil 1V-Twin 20w50 Full-Synthetic M/C Oil; $11/Qt; zinc level 1649 ppm; phosphorus level 1722 ppm.
BMW 20w50 Non-Synthetic M/C Oil; $7/Qt; zinc level 1951 ppm; phosphorus level 1800 ppm.
As much as I appreciate their efforts to inform, I want to dismiss the whole article when I read (from the S/R article):This is a good read! Very interesting!https://www.sportrider.com/tech/146_0308_oil/index.html
The "W" means that the oil was put through 'Winter' testing for cranking and pumpability, etc. -- which might not sound too important for motorcycles until you realize that most engine wear takes place on start-up.the "W" stands for "weight" or viscosity
For the "Chicken Little"s (from the S/R article):
Pretty insignificant....The motorcycle industry followed the ever-changing API service designations until a few years ago, when the SJ designation lowered maximum levels of certain additives used to reduce metal-to-metal friction. (The latest API designation is SL.) Specifically, the maximum allowable phosphorous content was lowered from 0.12 percent to 0.10 percent due to its negative effect on some catalytic converters.
'radman's correct about high pressure additives and the fact that 'things change' (and, the multiplicitous claims by small producers :huh: :blink: ).
Ford has an engine that uses shim & bucket cam followers (like the FJR) in World markets but uses heads with roller cam-followers w/rocker-arms for the American market -- for: hydraulic lifters (no valve adj.); less friction with the needle-roller bearing (more mpg); and less need for oil additives (that may, eventually, foul the cat-con). The major offenders (from a friction perspective) are the sliding-friction rocker-arm followers that many manufacturers employ -- the main culprit being the added lift-ratio from the cam lobe to the valve stem (extra, extreme, pressure). The FJR doesn't have this "feature" and uses the, notably reliable (and, low-wear), shim & bucket system.
I'd say: until we get a multitude of reports of cam lobe scoring and follower (shim) scoring -- much of the previous discussion just doesn't apply.
MamaYama reccos: "API Service SE, SF, SG, or higher" and "No Energy Conserving II" (anti-friction additives).
YMMV -- and, of course, you're free to use whatever you want....
That may very well be....charismaticmegafauna: Those ppm levels didn't come from BMW, Valvoline or Mobil; were direct from independent lab work.Also, Matthew Parkhouse doesn't work for BMW! He's just "Certifiable Old Fart" like me who's been riding BMW since 1969!!!
Absolutely not buying this reasoning on BMW engines one tiny little bit! I have over 500,000 miles on BMW twins and have never had a BMW engine fail on me; not once, not ever! Now, I don't trust the final drives in either my 1996 BMW R1100GS with 132,000 miles or my 2005 BMW R1150RT with 45,000 miles; I do admit the final drives are BMW Achilles Heel problem.That may very well be....charismaticmegafauna: Those ppm levels didn't come from BMW, Valvoline or Mobil; were direct from independent lab work.Also, Matthew Parkhouse doesn't work for BMW! He's just "Certifiable Old Fart" like me who's been riding BMW since 1969!!!
Still, this is no place for any info from (or about -- or, sourced from...)BMW. BMW is among those notorious manufacturers that use sliding friction cam followers along with leverage-increasing rocker-arms that force increased extreme pressure on (already, metalurgically-speaking) shakey engine parts.
Poor/faulty engine design cannot be saved by oil discussions...
Yep..., there are exceptions to the rule...!Absolutely not buying this reasoning on BMW engines one tiny little bit! I have over 500,000 miles on BMW twins and have never had a BMW engine fail on me; not once, not ever! Now, I don't trust the final drives in either my 1996 BMW R1100GS with 132,000 miles or my 2005 BMW R1150RT with 45,000 miles; I do admit the final drives are BMW Achilles Heel problem.
And once again, to make it perfectly clear, BMW Owners News has no affiliation with BMW Factory; neither does Parkhouse!
Forty years with BMW Twins last March and highest mileage was 197,000 on 1986 R80RT. The engines are bullet proof solid!
Show me a manufacturer that doesn't have ill-conceived designs.The failures of the ill-conceived (heroic) designs
Shimano. Never bought a bicycle/fishing component from them that wasn't 100%.Show me a manufacturer that doesn't have ill-conceived designs.The failures of the ill-conceived (heroic) designs
Sorry, that's a big NO on that one Spud.Shimano. Never bought a bicycle/fishing component from them that wasn't 100%.Show me a manufacturer that doesn't have ill-conceived designs.The failures of the ill-conceived (heroic) designs
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