i think most bike shops have a barrel of whatever oil they mostly stock in the workshop, normally a few dollars cheaper to bring in your own container and get it from the workshop instead of buying in 4L bottles.
we use Motul 8100 for the KTM and the gasgas
we may just go where no ones been
Same with me, had elf oil to start with when i brought the bike, changed to thumper oil and started getting false nuetrals jumping gears etc, the oil just seemed to be thicker then the elf oil.
Pulled out all my chutch plates and cleaned them all with CRC breakalean, have now changed Maxima oil, and will try that out.
Nothing worse then hitting false nuetrals and valve bouncing, when powering out of a corner in front of people.
this is a good topic. i notice in the honda manuals it reccommends using an SG? (from memory) or higher grade. im told by a local automotive parts department by a long serving manager that the further thru the alphabet the better, eg an SL is far superior to a SG oil.
i then looked around, and based on this cannot find an oil anywhere close to being as poor a grade as reccommended.
so on this topic, why shouldnt one use castrol magnatec for example in the correct viscosity range, as the stuff is about half the price of "motorcycle engine oil"
Hmm true, I thought that Magnatec is meant to be one of the best oils for the price around. $30 for 4 litres?
Oil isn't just oil. Found that out years ago, cost me an entire new set of clutch plates on one occassion, after a really disppointing day of burning my clutch out during a race.
Lower grade oil is lower grade from the start, it's not like a cheap oil does as good a job as a higher grade oil initially so changing it more frequently gets around a low grade oil. Yamalube for the Yamaha(s), Elf for the rest and after many years of use, I'm sticking with the good stuff, it's cheaper overall than cheap oil.
niether of these previous 2 responses are relevant to my question, firstly should clarify that hondas and probably some ther bikes run seperate engine oil to trans oil. so clutch issues are un related. a clutch is neither a 2 or 4 stroke object.
My response was to the thread topic/starter Rupecopp i.e. use the best oil you can, whatever type/part of the engine it's in, cheapest insurance if you are keeping your bike a while, if not, use cheap stuff and sell it to a stranger before it costs a lot more than few litres of oil. There's usually a good reason why and oil is cheap.
I've been using Morris Lubricants Ring Free ( no it's not a wind up ) 15W40. Essentially a good quality mixed fleet CF / SL. C= compression (diesel) S = spark. I first used it my diesel Nissan and it gives me a good 9000km before it starts to use oil and i do a change at 10000, which is 2* the recommended change interval. Been using it in the Guzzi for a couple of years but still do 5000km changes and it looks immaculate in the bore when you have the sump off for a filter change. Guzzi also has separate gearbox. Buy it by the 25l can for about $180. I think freight is free if you purchase 25l or more.
Heres a link to some info on this rotella stuff, the yanks on thumpertalk swear by it, I wonder what the equivalent oil is here? Delo?
https://www.aircraftspruce.com/catal...laoil14_50.php
If your bike is indeed a KX250F it holds about 1 to1.5 litres of oil and that oil is highly stressed. I would absolutely not be preoccupied about price, Id be much more concerned about the best quality oil and changing it often. Especially given that its specific horespower ( sae rear wheel ) is around 140-150 bhp per litre and cooling is marginal.
So often subsequent owners ( and dealers ) foot premature repair bills because the previous owners have taken short cuts on maintenance.
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