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12-01-2011 05:16 PM #1
What grade of oil should I use in my SB chevy?
I'm about due for an oil change. I live in So. Cal, and would like some imput of the grade of oil that you recommend. Crate motor, with aluminum heads, thumper cam, single carb. It only has 1100 on the motor,,- - - should I try a sythentic? or should I stick to
just a regular grade oil?
Thanks for the imput
Mike
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12-01-2011 07:03 PM #2
A few more specs on the motor would help and how you drive it. Street only, some track time, ect. What is your normal rpm range that you drive in?Bug
"I may be paranoid but that doesn’t mean they are not watching me"
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12-01-2011 09:05 PM #3
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12-02-2011 04:59 AM #4
Choosing oil is like choosing a color - very subjective, and lots of choices that really don't matter a lot for a street engine as long as you use a quality product. Many lubrication decisions are rooted in tradition, loyalty and the habits the users have formed over the years. In SOCAL you're not going to have the seasonal temperature swings, nor the sub-freezing starts others see so the cold start needs are not as much of an issue for you (really don't need the 0wt or 5wt cold feature as much in SOCAL). If you're going to be running it hard and fast I would consider something like Brad Penn or Joe Gibbs racing oils. If it's a cruiser then I would just select one of the majors like Castrol, Valvoline or others and stick with it. Personally I don't care for parafin based oils, and I've not switched to synthetics because I can't get comfortable with the extended change intervals and I'm too cheap to buy synthetics and change at 3000 miles, but that's just my tradition/loyalty/habit. If you want to read up on lubrication you might check out the Motor Oil University here - Motor Oil 101 - Bob is the Oil Guy Don't fret about the oil company ads - like CHR they accept advertisements from the industry to keep the site going, and most are oil companies vying for your attention.Roger
Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
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12-02-2011 06:00 AM #5
If you are using a GM crate motor or even some builders engine, they should specify a letter grade as well as weight grade. Brand name - if it's a flat tappet engine, then you want one like Joe Gibbs or Brad Penn that has more of the zinc compound, ZDDP. If it's a roller cam engine, then any of the national name brands will work just fine. The Mobil 1's, Lucas's, Amsoil's, Royal Purples - IMO are fine but way overpriced oils which good advertising has cast an expensive ($10-$12/quart+/-) spell on the buyers.Dave W
I am now gone from this forum for now - finally have pulled the plug
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12-02-2011 07:31 PM #6
Simple, use a good quality oil like Castrol change it often, your motor will last many moons. Myself I change it just after it goes from clear to brown, my eyes tell me when it's time.Is that your face or did your pants fall down?
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Welcome to CHR. I think that you need to hook up your vacuum advance. At part throttle when cruising you have less air and fuel in each cylinder, and the air-fuel mixture is not as densely packed...
MSD 8360 distributor vacuum advance