I tried looking around for an anwser but didn't really find a complete anwser. I was just wondering for my next oil change if I should switch over to synthetic or stick with regular. I used mobil 1 5W-30 w/ an oem Honda filter.I've heard bad things about synthetic motor oil and was just wondering what everybodies position on it is and if I should use it or not. BTW, this is all for my JDM H22, this will be my second oil chage since getting me swap complete if that helps any also.
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It depends, but overall Synthetic oil is better than regular dino oil. Im sure there are plenty of threads on this...
Synthetic oil is man made, it can withstand high temp, so lubrication when working your H22 or spirited Vtec driving is highly aided
IMO, it's up to you.
Synthetic oil or regular oil. Price wise it's about a good $2-3 difference.
Performance wise, synthetic is better...
Oh, stay away from Mobil 1 synthetic, that stuff burns a lot. You think im lying? research it. Mobil 1 oil filters on the other hand are top of the line next to K&N.
Here is a link that further explains...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_oil
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[QUOTE=Accord13&BA4]It depends, but overall Synthetic oil is better than regular dino oil. Im sure there are plenty of threads on this...
Synthetic oil is man made, it can withstand high temp, so lubrication when working your H22 or spirited Vtec driving is highly aided
IMO, it's up to you.
Synthetic oil or regular oil. Price wise it's about a good $2-3 difference.
Performance wise, synthetic is better...
Oh, stay away from Mobil 1 synthetic, that stuff burns a lot. You think im lying? research it. Mobil 1 oil filters on the other hand are top of the line next to K&N.
Here is a link that further explains...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_oil
I've been using regular mobil one ever since I could remeber without any problems. What would make such a uge difference to make synthetic mobil one burn? I just wanna know because i'd like to stay with mobil 1 but if its that hazardous I will defintely stay away from it. Thanks for any help in advance.
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bobistheoilguy.com If you want to learn about oil. I used reg for my first two oil changes so I could wash my motor out then went synthetic after that. I use Royal Purple 10w30 and it works fine.
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just remember, if u have any oil leaks using regular, when switching to synthetic, the leaks will be worse since synthetic oil is thinner and can squeeze through the little cracks and crevases. just word of warning. but it is better and does outperform regular oil. and if u think about it, the extra what $2-3/quart or $12 total is nothing. def worth the extra 10-12 bucks. if u r switching to regular, get any oil leaks fixed first. and Royal purple is da bomb when it comes to synthetic oil.
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Originally posted by accrdpowerjust remember, if u have any oil leaks using regular, when switching to synthetic, the leaks will be worse since synthetic oil is thinner and can squeeze through the little cracks and crevases. just word of warning. but it is better and does outperform regular oil. and if u think about it, the extra what $2-3/quart or $12 total is nothing. def worth the extra 10-12 bucks. if u r switching to regular, get any oil leaks fixed first. and Royal purple is da bomb when it comes to synthetic oil.
Synthetic oil does not "squeeze through cracks because it is thinner". Do you even know anything about oil? This could only be true if you switched from 20W50 dino oil to 5W20 synthetic! The truth is dino oil does not do as nearly good a job as synthetic oil at keeping oil seals from dry-rot. At the same time, dino oil breaks down and leaves deposits in these cracks. When you add synthetic oil to an old engine, it will actually dissolve and clean off these deposits over time, causing the leak or making the existing leak worse. Take 2 engines... one that has used dino oil for 120k miles, and the other using synthetic since the break-in period has completed, and see which one looks like clean metal with a little oil on it and which one looks like it has shit all over it.
Next time please know your shit before feeding fuckin' crap to people and making them believe retarded things about oil.
cha-ching
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Originally posted by DoctorCipherWRONG
Synthetic oil does not "squeeze through cracks because it is thinner". Do you even know anything about oil? This could only be true if you switched from 20W50 dino oil to 5W20 synthetic! The truth is dino oil does not do as nearly good a job as synthetic oil at keeping oil seals from dry-rot. At the same time, dino oil breaks down and leaves deposits in these cracks. When you add synthetic oil to an old engine, it will actually dissolve and clean off these deposits over time, causing the leak or making the existing leak worse. Take 2 engines... one that has used dino oil for 120k miles, and the other using synthetic since the break-in period has completed, and see which one looks like clean metal with a little oil on it and which one looks like it has shit all over it.
Next time please know your shit before feeding fuckin' crap to people and making them believe retarded things about oil.
cha-ching
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Originally posted by DoctorCipherWRONG
Synthetic oil does not "squeeze through cracks because it is thinner". Do you even know anything about oil? This could only be true if you switched from 20W50 dino oil to 5W20 synthetic! The truth is dino oil does not do as nearly good a job as synthetic oil at keeping oil seals from dry-rot. At the same time, dino oil breaks down and leaves deposits in these cracks. When you add synthetic oil to an old engine, it will actually dissolve and clean off these deposits over time, causing the leak or making the existing leak worse. Take 2 engines... one that has used dino oil for 120k miles, and the other using synthetic since the break-in period has completed, and see which one looks like clean metal with a little oil on it and which one looks like it has shit all over it.
Next time please know your shit before feeding fuckin' crap to people and making them believe retarded things about oil.
cha-ching
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Originally posted by DoctorCipherWRONG
Synthetic oil does not "squeeze through cracks because it is thinner". Do you even know anything about oil? This could only be true if you switched from 20W50 dino oil to 5W20 synthetic! The truth is dino oil does not do as nearly good a job as synthetic oil at keeping oil seals from dry-rot. At the same time, dino oil breaks down and leaves deposits in these cracks. When you add synthetic oil to an old engine, it will actually dissolve and clean off these deposits over time, causing the leak or making the existing leak worse. Take 2 engines... one that has used dino oil for 120k miles, and the other using synthetic since the break-in period has completed, and see which one looks like clean metal with a little oil on it and which one looks like it has shit all over it.
Next time please know your shit before feeding fuckin' crap to people and making them believe retarded things about oil.
cha-ching
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Originally posted by oozingmachismo2I'm below 100k on my f22a. My car though has 144k. I do have a leaking cam seal and now a vcg too. I'll replace em this weekend. I wanna upgrade to synthetic. Can I do it this late in the game without problems? Do I need to gumout engine flush my engine b4 the switch? What would you do?
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my motor has 43,xxx miles on it (thats what the company that sold it to me told me) and it doens't have any leaks that I can find. I'll probably be switching over to synthetic next time I change my oil. The only real benefit I see is that my internals will last longer any other ones you guys can on? Any brands anybody got in mind? I'm considering mobil 1 since thier regular oil did good for my 211,xxx F22 and no problems with it so far on the H.
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obviously some concieted knowall people need to read more carefully. of course the synthetic cleans out the existing deposits. i thought this was "common sense" to some. cleaning existing deposits opens up cracks and crevases. therefore creating an even worse leak...but it is also bc snyhtetic oil is thinner. therefore not only do u have the deposits removed but u also have a oil that is more easily able to leak out through old gaskets and such. therefore my dumbing down of the situation in my previous post is correct. is it my turn to say cha-ching.....?
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Originally posted by accrdpowerobviously some concieted knowall people need to read more carefully. of course the synthetic cleans out the existing deposits. i thought this was "common sense" to some. cleaning existing deposits opens up cracks and crevases. therefore creating an even worse leak...but it is also bc snyhtetic oil is thinner. therefore not only do u have the deposits removed but u also have a oil that is more easily able to leak out through old gaskets and such. therefore my dumbing down of the situation in my previous post is correct. is it my turn to say cha-ching.....?
cha-ching for repeated dumbassery
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