No such place. People don't appreciate how cold it can get in the desert in the winter overnight.If I lived in AZ in the areas where it never gets below 40 degrees
Yep, more people die in the desert from hypothermia than do from dehydration.No such place. People don't appreciate how cold it can get in the desert in the winter overnight.
https://www.weather.gov/psr/ExtremeTemps
That is where the "Corporate Average" part of CAFE comes in. It is a average across their whole corporate line with trucks and passenger cars having their own separate spec.If CAFE standards were the true reason for 0-20 oil then why would they throw it out the window by putting MT’s and Falken tires on stock Gladiators ?
$$$$$$If CAFE standards were the true reason for 0-20 oil then why would they throw it out the window by putting MT’s and Falken tires on stock Gladiators ?
Best for what?So 0-30 is best I guess
I just watched that very same video.What often gets missed or buried in these videos once people latch onto a point that supports their belief, and they lose everything after that is - a QUALITY 0w20 can do just fine. It's not all about viscosity on the bottle label.
if I use a very highly rated, good 0w20, I may well be better off than those who decide heavier is better because they say so - depending on the oil itself, not the viscosity.
I need to find them again, I was dumb, in a hurry, and did not book mark them, but I found Wrangler owners who decided "their favorite brand" in a heavier viscosity was better, only to join in a camshaft failure thread saying "me, too, and I've been using xxx weight oil".
Lake almost always says this in conclusion of his videos, hardly the first or only time ->
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Yes it would be the same at operating temperature.My ole ladies van ('06 Chrysler Town & Country) calls for 5W-20, which winter weight aside, wouldn't that be the same/similar to our trucks?
Anyway, those routinely run 200K+ miles and I've yet to see anyone debate the oil weight.
Maybe the camshaft in those wasn't made of butter![]()