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Oil Change Interval...8K?


WGREGT

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oil analysis, dropped a full grade by 1100 miles,

Don't fear the shear... because the difference in viscosity between

the grades is only 3 cSt and thats not 3 cSt thinner or thicker... the

measurement is 3 cSt in more flow... 3 cSt in more flow doesn't risk

increase wear... our modern engines protected by modern oils don't

operate with in a narrow 3 cSt range of risk...

Blackstone graded your oil by cSt testor... that means a quantity of

oil was heated to a standard temp and the rate of flow was recorded by

a stop watch... this flow-rate is governed by resistance of the oil

flowing under gravity through the capillary tube, this test actually

measures an oil’s kinematic viscosity. The viscosity is typically

reported in centistokes (cSt), and is calculated from the time it

takes oil to flow from the starting point to the stopping point using

a calibration constant supplied for each tube... so a drop of one

grade which is only a 3 cSt difference in flow is nothing to fear...

viscosity.JPG

Got an answer for everything, don't you BLS... always educational.

Thanks... :cool:

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Managed 130k on my 5th Gen with regular 8k changes using Castrol. Engine still running very strong the last time I rode her.

Anecdotal I know but it worked for me.

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oil analysis, dropped a full grade by 1100 miles,

Don't fear the shear... because the difference in viscosity between

the grades is only 3 cSt and thats not 3 cSt thinner or thicker... the

measurement is 3 cSt in more flow... 3 cSt in more flow doesn't risk

increase wear... our modern engines protected by modern oils don't

operate with in a narrow 3 cSt range of risk...

Blackstone graded your oil by cSt testor... that means a quantity of

oil was heated to a standard temp and the rate of flow was recorded by

a stop watch... this flow-rate is governed by resistance of the oil

flowing under gravity through the capillary tube, this test actually

measures an oil’s kinematic viscosity. The viscosity is typically

reported in centistokes (cSt), and is calculated from the time it

takes oil to flow from the starting point to the stopping point using

a calibration constant supplied for each tube... so a drop of one

grade which is only a 3 cSt difference in flow is nothing to fear...

viscosity.JPG

Got an answer for everything, don't you BLS... always educational.

Thanks... :cool:

A lot of theory atleast

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A lot of theory atleast

Not theory... fact...

I choose 0W30 because it gives the right flow at the normal operating temperature of

212ºF of the engine and that would be the viscosity of 10 at operating temps... so that

means for every 1000 rpms increase Mr.RC45's oil pressure increases another 10 psi... a

30w flows more oil at higher rpms which flows more oil between the critical bearings

which carries away more heat and I'm not wasting HP just pumping oil through the blow off valve...

0w30 psi

1000 10

2000 20

3000 30

4000 40

5000 50

6000 60

7000 70

8000 80

9000 90

10000 99

11000 99 blow off by the pressure relief valve

0w40

1000 12

2000 24

3000 36

4000 48

5000 72

6000 84

7000 96

8000 99 blow off by the pressure relief valve

9000 99

10000 99

11000 99

15W50 psi

1000 15

2000 30

3000 45

4000 60

5000 75

6000 90

7000 99 blow off by the pressure relief valve

8000 99

9000 99

10000 99

11000 99

Mr.RC45 Oil Press Gauge shows the problem with oil... it doesn't want to flow when its cold this is 0w30 at 112º resisting at 18 psi

RC45OilPressGauge_zpsc2421fbe.jpg

The same 0w30 at 203F Oil flowing 10 psi perfect

RC45Coolant203FOil10.jpg

You see I just don't talk... I went to trouble to installed a digital

oil pressure gauge on MrRC45 to know... 0w30 at 8000 rpms 82 Psi close

enough to perfect...

MrRC45Oil85Psi.jpg

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End result , you believe lower oil pressure and more oil flow is better, and it probably is for fuel mileage,

For real wear protection , I prefer thicker film strength and good oil pressure.

How many miles on your 0w30 car oil, any uoa more than 700 miles, like a UOA with 2000 miles that's been Hammer headed and not used for church social events?

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End result , you believe lower oil pressure and more oil flow is better, and it probably is for fuel mileage,

For real wear protection , I prefer thicker film strength and good oil pressure.

How many miles on your 0w30 car oil, any uoa more than 700 miles, like a UOA with 2000 miles that's been Hammer headed and not used for church social events?

How are you judging thicker film strength???

Mr.RC45 has over 59,000 miles and those are miles not in moderation

either... since 98 I've been running mostly Mobil 1 10W30 Energy Conserving

oil 365 days a year... 0w30 is new and improved 30 weight...

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How are you judging thicker film strength???

I can pretty much guarantee, my 2 quarts of 10w40 and 1 quart 20w50(for longevity) is running thicker than your 0w30, Through out the motor including the transmission

I just wanted to see a UOA of a Hard ridden bike with significant mileage more than 2000 mile on the oci, with the 0w30 car oil.

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How are you judging thicker film strength???

I can pretty much guarantee, my 2 quarts of 10w40 and 1 quart 20w50(for longevity) is running thicker than your 0w30, Through out the motor including the transmission

I just wanted to see a UOA of a Hard ridden bike with significant mileage more than 2000 mile on the oci, with the 0w30 car oil.

The only thing a grade guarantees is flow measured in centistrokes cSt

its not a measurement of thickness... you're not alone thinking in

terms of thickness but its not how oils are graded...

It is time to introduce the concept of lubrication. Most believe that

pressure = lubrication. This is false. Flow = lubrication. If pressure

was the thing that somehow lubricated your engine then we would all be

using 90 weight oil. Lubrication is used to separate moving parts, to

keep them from touching. There is a one to one relationship between

flow and separation. If you double the flow you will double the

separation pressure in a bearing. The pressure at the bearing entrance

is irrelevant.

In fact the relationship between pressure and flow is in opposition.

If you change your oil to a thicker formula the pressure will go up.

It goes up because the resistance to flow is greater and in fact the

flow must go down in order for the pressure to go up. They are

inversely related. Conversely if you choose a thinner oil then the

pressure will go down. This can only occur if the flow has increased.

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How are you judging thicker film strength???

I can pretty much guarantee, my 2 quarts of 10w40 and 1 quart 20w50(for longevity) is running thicker than your 0w30, Through out the motor including the transmission

I just wanted to see a UOA of a Hard ridden bike with significant mileage more than 2000 mile on the oci, with the 0w30 car oil.

The only thing a grade guarantees is flow measured in centistrokes cSt

its not a measurement of thickness... you're not alone thinking in

terms of thickness but its not how oils are graded...

It is time to introduce the concept of lubrication. Most believe that

pressure = lubrication. This is false. Flow = lubrication. If pressure

was the thing that somehow lubricated your engine then we would all be

using 90 weight oil. Lubrication is used to separate moving parts, to

keep them from touching. There is a one to one relationship between

flow and separation. If you double the flow you will double the

separation pressure in a bearing. The pressure at the bearing entrance

is irrelevant.

In fact the relationship between pressure and flow is in opposition.

If you change your oil to a thicker formula the pressure will go up.

It goes up because the resistance to flow is greater and in fact the

flow must go down in order for the pressure to go up. They are

inversely related. Conversely if you choose a thinner oil then the

pressure will go down. This can only occur if the flow has increased.

I'm not sure I totally buy into this flow/pressure explanation.

I know that on some pressurized oil fed engines with plain bearings that develop excessive bearing clearance, will then show lower oil pressure and shortly after that have problems with spun bearings. The oil pump is pumping the same volume of oil, but one or more of the bearings will fail. I've always been told that it is because the oil pump volume is the same but the pressure has decreased and allowed the oil film separating the plain bearings from the crank to fail and that leads to metal-to-metal contact and subsequent failure. That's what I've always been told.

I have owned bikes with roller bearing cranks and realize that they run very, very low oil pressure but a very high volume due to point contact of the roller balls which benefit in no way to oil pressure.

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Blackstone reports at 10 paces! :goofy: BLS did you use the honda tool that mounts to the oil filter to get the pressure or did you tap in elsewhere? Also where did you get the display?

I started my own thread that out lines the mod...

http://www.vfrdiscussion.com/forum/index.php/topic/80193-mr-rc45-digital-oil-pressure-gauge-mod/?p=984074

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How are you judging thicker film strength???

I can pretty much guarantee, my 2 quarts of 10w40 and 1 quart 20w50(for longevity) is running thicker than your 0w30, Through out the motor including the transmission

I just wanted to see a UOA of a Hard ridden bike with significant mileage more than 2000 mile on the oci, with the 0w30 car oil.

The only thing a grade guarantees is flow measured in centistrokes cSt

its not a measurement of thickness... you're not alone thinking in

terms of thickness but its not how oils are graded...

It is time to introduce the concept of lubrication. Most believe that

pressure = lubrication. This is false. Flow = lubrication. If pressure

was the thing that somehow lubricated your engine then we would all be

using 90 weight oil. Lubrication is used to separate moving parts, to

keep them from touching. There is a one to one relationship between

flow and separation. If you double the flow you will double the

separation pressure in a bearing. The pressure at the bearing entrance

is irrelevant.

In fact the relationship between pressure and flow is in opposition.

If you change your oil to a thicker formula the pressure will go up.

It goes up because the resistance to flow is greater and in fact the

flow must go down in order for the pressure to go up. They are

inversely related. Conversely if you choose a thinner oil then the

pressure will go down. This can only occur if the flow has increased.

I'm not sure I totally buy into this flow/pressure explanation.

I know that on some pressurized oil fed engines with plain bearings that develop excessive bearing clearance, will then show lower oil pressure and shortly after that have problems with spun bearings. The oil pump is pumping the same volume of oil, but one or more of the bearings will fail. I've always been told that it is because the oil pump volume is the same but the pressure has decreased and allowed the oil film separating the plain bearings from the crank to fail and that leads to metal-to-metal contact and subsequent failure. That's what I've always been told.

I have owned bikes with roller bearing cranks and realize that they run very, very low oil pressure but a very high volume due to point contact of the roller balls which benefit in no way to oil pressure.

I think in both cases the measured pressure has dropped because resistance to flow has decreased... this does not prove or require that flow has increased. At a given pump speed the flow should be relatively defined... shouldn't it? Resistance to flow would cause an increase in measured pressure to maintain the flow rate (e.g. increased viscosity); conversely, a decrease in resistance to flow (e.g. excessive bearing clearance) would result in a decrease in pressure with the same flow rate.

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