"motorcycle" oil and regular car oil...
- Sev
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Question...MotoF150 wrote:PLEASE! lets not get started and fight about this subject! Im getting sooo sick and tired of explaining this, automotive oil is formulated as a crankcase, combustion oil, motorcycle oil is formulated as both a combustion, crankcase oil, AND a transmission oil, AND a wet cltuch oil. There are too many more differenences to explain, I suggest go to www.amsoil.com and on the home page click on " The White Pages Of Motorcycle Oil" and that will explain everything you need to know.
Why are they formulated as combustion oils? I mean, in a four stroke engine (like what we're talking about here) it is ideal to NOT have oil enter the combustion chamber. In fact it's a BAD thing to have it happen. Hence the standard 3 ring design for the four stroke piston - combustion, oil control, oil scraping. All three of which are designed to prevent the oil from burning.
In a two stroke the oil is injected into the engine with the fuel/air mixture and as such is very different from four stroke oil as it needs to have different properties.
Not to mention the fact that there are bikes with the following: separately sealed transmission, separately sealed clutch, and dry clutches. All of which require/use different types of oil (or none at all).
For someone who claims to be so smart...
Of course I'm generalizing from a single example here, but everyone does that. At least I do.
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I have always used what ever engine oils I wanted, as long as the grade is close to what is recommended for my bikes and never had any problems. I never use addetives in my oil. Some addetives in the fuel, rarely.
1993 750 Vulcan
one seater
ear shave, pod filters
rear turn signal relocation
lowered rear 2" soft tail
converted to manuel cam chain tensioner
horn relocation
one seater
ear shave, pod filters
rear turn signal relocation
lowered rear 2" soft tail
converted to manuel cam chain tensioner
horn relocation
- Skier
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Which bikes, which car oils? From oil analysis from Blackstone Labs, some of the bike-specific oil I've used has more slippery additives than the car oils I use.Britjoe wrote:On newer bikes the clutch slip is ridiculous on car motor oil
[url=http://www.motoblag.com/blag/]Practicing the dark and forgotten art of using turn signals since '98.[/url]