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Thread: Oil in a Harley

  1. #16
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    Here is a comment I read recently online (Cycleworld) as a conclusion to the what oil synthetic or conventional.

    Most engine wear takes place in the first minutes after cold-starting, as a result of the time it takes for oil to circulate to all parts. Thus wear prevention is mainly a function of the additive package, and not of the molecular origin of the oil itself.


    Me - I like my synthetics. But shit do I pay for them!

  2. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by AllanB View Post
    Here is a comment I read recently online (Cycleworld) as a conclusion to the what oil synthetic or conventional.

    Most engine wear takes place in the first minutes after cold-starting, as a result of the time it takes for oil to circulate to all parts. Thus wear prevention is mainly a function of the additive package, and not of the molecular origin of the oil itself.
    I once built a 250cc accumulator for my hot Mini, just sat in line on the pressure side of the oil pump. It had a solenoid valve wired to a relay fed from the ignition, turn key and wait until the oil pressure gauge came up to 30lbs or so and began to fall, then start engine.

    I had great plans of selling thousands of them. Went the same way as the pornographic garden gnomes I tried to flog.

    Quote Originally Posted by AllanB View Post
    Me - I like my synthetics. But shit do I pay for them!
    Aye, I use Mobil 1 V2, bought a dozen 5L packs at a damn good price several years ago.
    Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon

  3. #18
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    I'd be in for a pornographic garden gnome or two . What a hoot to have in your front yard - instead of a gnome holding a fishing rod maybe a massive ... ah ..... rod. Topless female gnomes with saucy grins on their faces.

  4. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by AllanB View Post
    I'd be in for a pornographic garden gnome or two . What a hoot to have in your front yard - instead of a gnome holding a fishing rod maybe a massive ... ah ..... rod. Topless female gnomes with saucy grins on their faces.
    Started with a gnome face down in the house herb garden, with a knife in it's back. And a pixie almost wearing a tutu in the orchard. Visitors tended to think it was either hilarious or horrible.

    You can buy unpainted, normal ones at the garden shops and apply epoxy putty and paint to suitably modify them. I went as far as taking scans from modified gnomes and cleaning them up in a cad app. Never had the time or energy to get moulds made, and the files are long gone.
    Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon

  5. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by nodrog View Post
    Diesel oil is the go.
    If you want cost effective oil, then this man is correct.
    Also synthetic will not hurt an engine. Ever. Unless it's the wrong grade.
    Synthetic will last longer, that's why it's becoming so popular with cars, everyone wants 20k services, so you need oil that will last. Synthetic resists shear and temperature better. So is good for air cooled. Just beware if you have a wet clutch that a lot of modern synthetics have friction additives that will ruin clutch plates.

    For something like a Harley, cheap diesel oil will be fine. Just remember to change it on TIME. I say time because we all know Harley riders don't do big ks

  6. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Revhead View Post
    Just beware if you have a wet clutch that a lot of modern synthetics have friction additives that will ruin clutch plates.
    Not quite right, some synthetic motor oils have an inherent slipperiness, they don't contain friction modifiers but are just naturally slippery - like Esters and Polyolglycols. Poly Alpha Olefins (PAO) don't seem to have that problem though.

    I use synthetic API SL, JASO MA2, SAE 10W-40 in my bike, change at every 5,000 km - but then I get my oil from where I work. Pay full retail for my filters though and change it every oil change. I buy K&N filters with that hex nut on the top so I can get them off - the Suzuki M50 is a pain to get filters off (same for every bike isn't it?) and the K&N filter makes the task much easier.

  7. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by Old Steve View Post
    the Suzuki M50 is a pain to get filters off (same for every bike isn't it?) and the K&N filter makes the task much easier.

    Nah - my Honda Hornet was a breeze to remove - nicely positioned at the front of the engine - wrap a strap and go. My Ducati is easily accessible and I've a cup-tool ready that slips over the oil filter and attaches to a wrench. Will need to wait until I use it as it's under warranty for some time yet

  8. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by AllanB View Post
    Most engine wear takes place in the first minutes after cold-starting, as a result of the time it takes for oil to circulate to all parts. Thus wear prevention is mainly a function of the additive package, and not of the molecular origin of the oil itself.
    I don't like that. My reading siuggests the synthetics have higher surface tension and will stick to the metal better and so give better protection on start up.
    My vote goes to the Mobil 1 V2 for a Harley. It's specifically designed for the job.

    As has been pointed out oil and tyres could be really expensive places to start saving money.
    There is a grey blur, and a green blur. I try to stay on the grey one. - Joey Dunlop

  9. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by pritch View Post

    As has been pointed out oil and tyres could be really expensive places to start saving money.

    They are not areas I skimp on. Bike or cars.

  10. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by pritch View Post
    I don't like that. My reading siuggests the synthetics have higher surface tension and will stick to the metal better and so give better protection on start up.
    My vote goes to the Mobil 1 V2 for a Harley. It's specifically designed for the job.

    As has been pointed out oil and tyres could be really expensive places to start saving money.
    Quote Originally Posted by AllanB View Post
    They are not areas I skimp on. Bike or cars.

    Oil is cheapest possible preventative maintenance repair ever...
    Opinions are like arseholes: Everybody has got one, but that doesn't mean you got to air it in public all the time....

  11. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by awayatc View Post
    Oil is cheapest possible preventative maintenance repair ever...
    Yep. Yet often ignored. Purchased a couple cars in the past year - walked away from lots due to evidence of lack of oil maintenance down the oil filler hole.

  12. #27
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    Have revisited this thread, we're talking air cooled Harleys here aren't we. So the engine runs hotter, the oil needs increased oxidation resistance, no wet clutch so no need for a JASO MA or MA2 oil. A synthetic gives greater thermal stability, also has a higher viscosity index (the rate at which an oil changes viscosity with change of temperature, a high VI oil like a synthetic will be thinner at low temperatures and thicker at high temperatures compared to say a mineral oil of the same viscosity grade.

    I'd use a synthetic motor oil, SAE 20W-50. And I think that's what Harley Davidson recommend.

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