NegativeOne13
New member
I run 90w gear lube in mine.
I've been considering this option for a while. What I gathered from the above is that it's going to break down more often than GM S/C oil, so change it more frequently, for the price I would change it every oil change.
Mobil 1 0W-30.
Like 4 bucks for a quart of it...and should last the lifetime of your car to be honest...or at least as long as you keep it.
I haven't done them...Synthetic Shield (Scotty) did. Who is a AMSOil Tech. You can notice the temp drop by even touching it. Normally it scorches your hand if you grab onto it...now I can hold onto it. Like I said, some people like the idea...some people don't. Just because it costs more doesn't always mean it is the best route to take. ALSO, when GM ran out of S/C oil at dealerships, the recommened replacement is Mobil1 Synthetic. TLSheff even has pictures of the bulletin he took and posted here...which wasn't for public eyes, dealer employees only.
Dexcool is recommened by GM, you saw where that one went with the huge lawsuit.
How do you know? These are people coming on here and reading this stuff that don't have any clue about cars and might just take your suggestion as gold. 50k miles from now, it could wipe out the gears on the rotor pack and cause an expensive fix. You don't know. So putting out a recommendation like that is not good practice in my book.
Kinematic Viscosity @ 100°C, cSt (ASTM D-445) 8.7
Kinematic Viscosity @ 40°C, cSt (ASTM D-445) 47.3
Kinematic Viscosity @ 100°C, cSt (ASTM D-445) 10.5
Kinematic Viscosity @ 40°C, cSt (ASTM D-445) 62.9
Touche; I don't know how long it'll last. People also might take yours saying GM oil is the only thing you can use. Do you know the properties? My example earlier was the same. GM DESIGNED Dexcool to be safe, but it obviously wasn't...so how is this any different? I'd personally think, if it was going to fail...it should have by now. Scotty had over 110K on his car when the transmission shelled. His blower was fine...seen it in person after it was bought by someone up here (GenIII M90, for the record). My car shifts at 6500 RPM, on a 3.1" pulley...so figure out what the blower is spinning at that RPM...which is PROBABLY more stressful than a bone stock GTP that is daily driven. Mine should have failed by now I guess. My rotor pack gears should have been toasted. This is the same thing as tossing a smaller pulley on a car...can you do it? Sure. Is it safe? It could be. Doesn't mean its a bad idea. Doesn't mean it is the correct one either. Like I said to being with, when it fails, I'll let you know. And I'll eat my words.
And make note...I mistyped A number LOL...0W-20 is the correct weight, NOT 0W-30.. This is because no matter the temp of the oil...it never changes its viscosity. I'd also like to believe that there is SOMETHING else out there than just the pricey, hard to come by, GM S/C Oil. I'd love to sit down and break down the properties of GM's supercharger oil (which is probably mostly whale fat...lol) and the break down of Mobil 1's motor oil...to see how different GM's Supercharger oil really is. I do know it is Animal Fat based. Which, motor oil isn't, so I will give you that. I guess what I'm getting at...is that I'm just trying to help the cause...if you can get away with running something that lowers snout temps and still lubricates the internal gears just fine with a lower cost and a overall simpler product to find...then I'm all for it...and I think anyone would be, including you Zef.
I will however keep looking...and ask Scotty to post his findings on here when he compared the 2. That will help things here immensely IMO.
Kinematic Viscosity
100°C 8.7 cSt ASTM D-445
40°C 54 cSt ASTM D-445
Viscosity Index 139 ASTM D-2270
I've heard KB suggests mobil 10w30 for their blowers for termis....
amsoil sig series 0W-20.
sig series 10W-30
Thats really different eh?
Looks like the amsoil sig series 0W-20 would be perfect....
Its thinner when cold, similar viscosity once warm, resists thinning more than the GM fluid.
Second, the expansion of the supercharger oil is not to nothing. This is important because the supercharger snout is a closed system. The motor oil will expand much more as the temps increase can can cause problems with your seals. I didn't remember about this one until I looked at the Nye sheet.