Why do you use 50 weight oil instead of the recommended oil?Per the driver's handbooks I looked at, either a straight 30 or a 20W30 oil was recommended for all models. It's interesting to see that some oils didn't have a grade - just Castrol X.L. or Mobiloil A.
I've always used 20W50 - Castrol and, more recently, Valvoline VR-1 in our '62 tri-carb and '80 MGB.
I think the 10W-40 isn't that far off of the 20W-30 but going to a 50 weight oil when the manual calls for 30 weight is a stretch. I am still trying to find the manual that calls for 50 weight, mine says 30 weight. 1961 BT7.
I also wonder if guys are thinking the 20 in 20W-50 is a weight. It isn't! 20W-50 oil is never 20 weight. It does help in cold starting but as soon as the engine is warm it is full 50 weight oil. The 20W stands for "20 degrees winter", 20* winter. The oil doesn't get thinner when it is cold.
It's not 50 weight oil. A single viscosity grade oil, like a SAE 50 grade oil, has a viscosity index of 100.What is a low viscosity index? It's 50 weight oil. 50 weight oil has a different viscosity at every temperature, but for standards is recorded at 100*C.
Read what I said more carefully.So the colder the oil gets the thinner it is? Sorry, just not true. Like I said,,,, the 20 is a temperature rating, not a weight. The oil is rated to be a certain viscosity down to 20*,,,,, certainly thicker in viscosity than a 50 weight oil at 100*C.
20w oil will flow at low temps...that is what it is designed for...a good choice is 15w/50 too for older cars.So 0W-30 flows like 0 weight oil? What is 0 weight oil?