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You realize you will never hear unanimous agreement from gearheads on which is the "best" engine oil to run. That's because a little true data is nearly always mixed with fixed opinion - sometimes more than a little. In southern California and the greater Southwest, 10W-40 oil works really well in seasoned engines. On a brand new engine or fresh rebuild with tight bearings and clearances, 10W-30 is a great choice. If you reside in cooler climates, again 10W-30. On the other hand, if your truck crawls the back roads of Mojave or the Sanoran desert, 15W-50 or 20W-50 becomes pretty attractive for a typical factory engine. But, what about modified engines? I run 5W-50 in my 355. It's happy at 5,500 RPM. The point is that there is no absolute when it comes to suitable lubrication other than the moving parts of the engine need to be adequately lubricated. That's what oil does - for the most part pretty well no matter what you are running. Albeit, the idea of 20W-50 "taking up the space" to prevent cam wear wavers on ludicrous. Virtually any multi-vis or straight weight oil originally specified for an application will adequately lubricate the moving parts of the engine, including the camshaft and piston skirts - AS LONG AS the high pressure friction modifiers (for example ZDDP) are present in suitable quantity. This is old news. Where you might notice subtle differences in the performance of various oils in street machines is over consistently long distance commutes with steady throttle. Lighter weight oils may provide measurable improvements in fuel mileage if all other variables are maintained constant. Eat a few extra cheesburgers and an extra twelve pack of beer in one week or forget to air the tires and that could change. Get the idea? So, if you want to run 20W-50 in your engine, go right ahead. It won't hurt anything. It may cost a little more. Will it function any better than the 10W-40 you have always used, probably not, unless you change it more often. But then, you could accomplish the same result with the 10W-40 by changing it more often.... Just what you wanted to hear, another opinion. Use what has always worked. Why deviate from a proven routine?
10-40 used to be what everyone ran. Now you can't find it anywhere. What's up with that?