dirtmover wrote:
tjkj2002 wrote:
I've fixed many "seeping" diffs by just switching to 85w-140 non-syn gear oil,better for the diff anyways.
At half the price I'll gladly put in the non-syn oil if it performs as well or better
Would you suggest 85W-140 over 80W-90 when I do very little towing. Also bear in mind we regularly get winter temperatures approaching -20F here. I've heard reports of 85W-140 turning to a Jello like consistency at these temperatures?
I am sure Tj can give you more info, but what I can tell you for sure, every serious offroader that I met uses Lucas 85W140 nonsynthetic. Granted, I live in Cleveland not Alaska, so we don't get -20 other than with wind chill, but that Lucas 85W140 should be ok till -27F. I went online and pulled the data sheet for 2 oil weight from Lucas:
this is for 80W90:
http://www.lucasoil.com/images/medialib ... earOil.pdfthis is for 85W140:
https://www.lucasoil.com/images/mediali ... earOil.pdfas you see, the pour point is just few degrees lower for heavier weight, I would personally use 85W140. Weight-wise, at lower temperature, an 80w or an 85w should not make such a big difference imo.
Also, those synthetic oils I believe are sold more for EPA mileage than for how good they are. I made the mistake to use it and I had to replace the rear seal 15k later...