Sponsored

Engine oil weight

wanderer

Well-Known Member
First Name
Ralph
Joined
Aug 10, 2017
Threads
255
Messages
1,973
Reaction score
1,082
Location
Carlsbad CA
Vehicle(s)
2018 jlu rubicon. Surfboard. Bare feet, moose drawn air sled, Interstellar time warp space transport fighter
Occupation
Engineering Geologist
I’m not terribly sophisticated when it comes to this kind of stuff I mean I know how to work on cars and when I was 15 my dad bought me a 57 Plymouth that I had to rebuild from and I’ve put an engine or two in, but usually they were straight and swaps.
And for the life, I can’t understand why anybody would go with zero weight oil I mean, I would think you would want oil coating to stick to the metal parts and keep them lubricated and if I understand this correctly, the zero oil weight does not do that so if somebody please explain all this stuff to me cause I don’t get it
Sponsored

 

Reinen

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 10, 2021
Threads
19
Messages
3,187
Reaction score
7,514
Location
Utah
Vehicle(s)
2021 Jeep Wrangler JL Rubicon
The engine tolerances between a modern engine and your 57 Plymouth are night & day. Light years apart. Older engines needed thicker oil, it helped reduce oil consumption in the loose tolerances between engine parts. Modern engines are the opposite. They need thinner oil to get in the much tighter tolerances between engine parts and lubricate them properly.

Modern oil is also very different from '50s oil in many ways other than viscosity. In spite of being thinner, modern oil is much "stickier" than vintage oil. The thinner viscosity doesn't translate to not coating things well, modern oil coats much better. Modern oil also handles the higher temps of modern engines.

This is just the tip of the iceberg, there's a lot more detail to it and people will debate oil endlessly.
But the simple bottom line is that engines have evolved since '57 and so has motor oil. It's an apples to oranges comparison now. What was valid then just doesn't apply anymore. Lower viscosity is part of the modern engine & oil relationship.
 

Jay Gatsby

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 28, 2020
Threads
0
Messages
69
Reaction score
99
Location
SoCal
Vehicle(s)
2020 JT
Dude, have you searched for this subject on this forum? There are dozens of threads about oil viscosity. If you’ve got a JL with the 3.6, then you’ve got the PUG (Pentastar Upgrade) which Jeep recommends the 0W-20. Many people have run that oil just fine for 100k miles. Others chose a higher viscosity oil. Supposedly the PUG needs lower viscosity and some say it was designed for it. Others think the recommendation for lower viscosity oil is only for CAFE. Believe what you want and run what you want, it’s your ride. Also many have done UOA on a regular basis and found no wear difference between 0W-20 and a higher viscosity like 5W-30, so there’s that.
 

azjl#3

Well-Known Member
First Name
Scott
Joined
Sep 24, 2022
Threads
17
Messages
3,030
Reaction score
3,664
Location
North AZ
Vehicle(s)
2024 silver zenith or atomic silver. JLUR Extreme Recon-ish
Occupation
retired, grumpy, yet, friendly
3,,,,,,2,,,,,,,1,,,,,,,

I will add, VVT is not why you use the lower viscosity, and it's the roller bearings in the valve train, not the VVT.
 

Sponsored

flyer92

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jeff
Joined
Feb 6, 2021
Threads
122
Messages
1,736
Reaction score
2,608
Location
Nevada
Vehicle(s)
'21 2-Door JL Sport, former '80 CJ-5 and '99 TJ
Vehicle Showcase
2

Sparky123

Member
First Name
Bill
Joined
Mar 15, 2025
Threads
0
Messages
17
Reaction score
29
Location
Virginia
Vehicle(s)
2024 Sport S 2-dr Auto/V6
The first time I drained the factory fill 0w-20 oil from our new Nissan Rogue Sport's 2L DI engine, I was shocked how "watery" the oil was. The engine sounded like a sewing machine. Did two short mileage OC's with Idemitsu 0w-20, sounded the same. Third OC. decided to blend 50%/50% 0w-20/5w-30 Pennzoil Ultra Platinum. MUCH quieter and smoother running. IMO, use a "light" 5w-30 oil (such as Ultra Platinum) and your engine and it's little tailpipe will wag w/joy. It really depends on driving conditions/climate. etc, etc....and personal beliefs. (I change out the oil early as well. No long mileage OC's even w/"extended" oils.) If you've been using 0w-20 oil, give 5w-30 oil a try and see/feel if it makes a difference.
 

Nardulli

Well-Known Member
First Name
Jim
Joined
Nov 12, 2025
Threads
3
Messages
59
Reaction score
42
Location
St Louis
Vehicle(s)
2021 JLU Rubicon Diesel
The tolerance idea is not valid. Sorry. I’ve been building engines a long time, and the tolerances for the rotating mass haven’t changed much. I still set them up + 2 Thou not to exceed 2.5 thou. That’s for a 1960’s SBC or a modern 392 Hemi.

OEMs have gone to the 0 W XX oil as a means to fractionally improve fleet fuel mileage. They go on about cold starts blah blah blah but it’s about meeting those fleet numbers. And it is pure stupidity.
VW call for 0-16W . GM was calling for 0W-20 on their 6.2 liter engines. Some DEI hire engineer decided that the oiling holes on their crank journals needs more chamfering. This, together with the 0 weight, has cost GM about $1B - yes, that’s a B. They quietly changed the oil recommendation to 5w30 Dexos. That helps, but they are still seeing oil squirt out of the side of the Bearing instead of staying between the bearing and the journal. The 5 W helps some.
Sponsored

 
 







Top