4T oil

Stella, LML, Bajaj and other Indian scooters

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EvilNerdLord
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4T oil

Post by EvilNerdLord »

Anyone use a pure synthetic in the 4T?
how'd it work for you?
Did it make a difference in power or MGP's?
Did you put it in at low (new) mileage or later? ( @ how many then?)

And most important question...Was it worth the extra moola to use?



:?:
molly_2
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Post by molly_2 »

:)
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PeteH
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Post by PeteH »

General rule of thumb on the four-strokes is to use dino oil for the first couple of changes (first service at 250-500 miles, then the next change after that), then switch to synthetic. The idea, generally, is that conventional oil, while still lubricating, isn't quite as slick as synth and will help promote just the right amount of ring and cylinder wear to help the two seal up nicely with each other and to help grind/flush any little metal bits left over. After that, the synthetic minimizes wear for longer life.

I don't know if this scheme is appropriate to the LML 4T motor, but that's the generally-accepted strategy on the Buddy 4T side of the forum.
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EvilNerdLord
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Post by EvilNerdLord »

so, 500 is the break in according to SOM, the real break in is up 1500
..the sweet spot would be after then?
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viney266
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Post by viney266 »

yeah, after second oil change go to synthetic IMO.
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EvilNerdLord
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Post by EvilNerdLord »

It couldnt hurt to try it....and if the benifits outweigh the cost (stella cap. Isnt all that much) then ill do it...

But im not even going to look , much less opn, the can of worms that is 'best brand to use' :P
Robbie
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Post by Robbie »

Research before purchass....the only synthetic I am aware of, designed to be used in a engine/gearbox/clutch shared system is Spectro Gold, from Spectro Oils of America.

The key is a synthetic lube designed to work with a clutch.....a tough balance.....slippery oil that allows a friction disc to operate correctly.

BTW....I'm AM biased.....this is the only oil I use in my many 'unit construction' shared oil motorcycles....probably over the last 30 years.

Rob
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Dooglas
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Post by Dooglas »

Robbie wrote:The key is a synthetic lube designed to work with a clutch.....a tough balance.....slippery oil that allows a friction disc to operate correctly.
Actually, many motorcycles use a wet clutch - the BV 350 does also, for that matter. That is the purpose of the GL-4 gear oil spec as well.
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Post by Robbie »

Dooglas wrote:
Robbie wrote:The key is a synthetic lube designed to work with a clutch.....a tough balance.....slippery oil that allows a friction disc to operate correctly.
Actually, many motorcycles use a wet clutch - the BV 350 does also, for that matter. That is the purpose of the GL-4 gear oil spec as well.
I think something was missed in translation....I don't understand the response.

GL-4 is a gear oil, not a motor oil......the engines I reference share their motor oil with transmission and clutch.....GL-4 is final drive specific.

Rob
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kmrcstintn
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Post by kmrcstintn »

any motorcycle engine oil that is certified or rated as a JASO MA or JASO MA2 has been purposed for use in wet clutch applications and there are several major brands of synthetic oil that come to mind...

Valvoline, Castrol, Amsoil, Spectro, Motul, Maxima, Suzuki, et al

just select one in the required viscosity (eg: 10w-40, 20w-50) and use it with confidence...
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Dooglas
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Post by Dooglas »

Robbie wrote:GL-4 is a gear oil, not a motor oil......the engines I reference share their motor oil with transmission and clutch.....GL-4 is final drive specific.
Understand. The GL-4 reference was in regard to the BV350 where the wet clutch is in the transmission which is separate from the crankcase. Regarding a wet clutch which runs in the crankcase oil, as kmrcstintn points out, the JASO spec is intended to serve that purpose and most motorcycle oils including Motul 4T meet it.
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