Tried posting this in the members Lounge but it has a pink background and says unapproved. Not sure what's going on? Going to give it a try here.
I spend a good bit of time over on "Bob is the oil guy" forum. Discussions about JASO MA/MA2 oil rating going on at any given time.
I'm looking for info/experience back in 1997/1998 when energy conserving became a label on bottles in 1997 then JASO was established in 1998.
My question is this: Even though oils above 10w30 grade are not rated energy conserving simply because the higher viscosity discounts them from an engine efficiency standpoint, has anyone experienced issues with clutch slippage during the 1997/1998 time frame or after, running "Automotive" 10w40, 15w40, 20w50 Etc in any bike not just a Yamaha XS1100?
My contention is if it doesn't have "energy conserving" on the bottle, there's no magic pixie dust that is a friction modifier other than traditional additives such as boron, moly and zinc.
Over on BITOG, guys are adamant about friction modifiers that somehow make a difference, yet no one can identify them and the potential to be in oils that are not labeled as energy conserving. However I've never had an issue myself and I'm trying to get some real world experience from others besides myself that I can share back on that forum.
I spend a good bit of time over on "Bob is the oil guy" forum. Discussions about JASO MA/MA2 oil rating going on at any given time.
I'm looking for info/experience back in 1997/1998 when energy conserving became a label on bottles in 1997 then JASO was established in 1998.
My question is this: Even though oils above 10w30 grade are not rated energy conserving simply because the higher viscosity discounts them from an engine efficiency standpoint, has anyone experienced issues with clutch slippage during the 1997/1998 time frame or after, running "Automotive" 10w40, 15w40, 20w50 Etc in any bike not just a Yamaha XS1100?
My contention is if it doesn't have "energy conserving" on the bottle, there's no magic pixie dust that is a friction modifier other than traditional additives such as boron, moly and zinc.
Over on BITOG, guys are adamant about friction modifiers that somehow make a difference, yet no one can identify them and the potential to be in oils that are not labeled as energy conserving. However I've never had an issue myself and I'm trying to get some real world experience from others besides myself that I can share back on that forum.
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