JeffWoodall
Well-Known Member
I thought I was smart until I read this......I need to take a nap now.I'm just ribbing you, but it might be true. Oddly, I have just finished up some research on gear oils, and from what I can tell, the weight is not the factor to look for. Synthetic vs conventional mineral lubrication is a more serious topic when it comes to differential gears. Ford apparently was having trouble with contemporary synthetic 75w90 hence the conventional mineral 80w90 recommendation. That is all hearsay, but it would make sense if you start to follow the data.
The recommended weight gear oil for our trucks *80W90* typically has a kinematic viscosity@40*C of 135-165 cSt, i.e an ISO 150 gear oil grade. Our Motorcraft 80W90 has a kinematic viscosity@40*C of 146 cSt. Amsoil SG 75W90 has a kinematic viscosity@40*C that is too low @ 109 cSt, i.e. an (lower) ISO 100 grade. Amsoil synthetic 80W90 has a kinematic viscosity@40*C of 120.2 cSt, which is still too low. Even If you are going to replace the recommended Motorcraft 80W90 with Amsoil SG 75W110, it only has a kinematic viscosity@40*C of 132.6 cSt! It gets close to the 135 cSt of a recommended ISO 150 grade gear oil, but still no cigar.
Our M220 differentials and gears seem to need ISO 150 grade gear oil with a kinematic viscosity @40*C of at least 135 cSt.
Sponsored