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dean from bozeman 04-07-2020 04:24 PM

Oil viscosity test
 

Here's a question for you old timers or someone who learned from an old timer. Is there a "homegrown" method to determine an oil's viscosity?

Basically, how can you tell whether a car has winter or summer oil?

I remember the Prell shampoo commercial when I was a kid. They would put a pearl into a bottle of Prell and it would slowly sink to the bottom. Now is there a way to test motor oil.

jb-ob 04-07-2020 07:37 PM

Re: Oil viscosity test
 

Where you live, if it doesn't move in winter, it must be summer oil.

Mulletwagon 04-07-2020 08:00 PM

Re: Oil viscosity test
 

We use to measure paint viscosity by pouring a sample into a calibrated cup (about the size of a rattle can lid) with a hole on the bottom. Drain time was noted and compared to a table for the approximate viscosity. Can probably develop your own system recording drain time for know oil viscosities. Old heads probably just watched as they poured.

Steve Plucker 04-07-2020 09:48 PM

Re: Oil viscosity test
 

Here you go Dean...

https://search.yahoo.com/yhs/search?...0::t&t=://mail

Pluck

dean from bozeman 04-07-2020 09:53 PM

Re: Oil viscosity test
 

Thanks Pluck. I've found a site that may help me solve the problem. I will report results at a future time. Now if I can just get my hands on a graduated cylinder...or make my own.

M2M 04-07-2020 10:23 PM

Re: Oil viscosity test
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by dean from bozeman (Post 1871357)
Here's a question for you old timers or someone who learned from an old timer. Is there a "homegrown" method to determine an oil's viscosity?

Basically, how can you tell whether a car has winter or summer oil?

I remember the Prell shampoo commercial when I was a kid. They would put a pearl into a bottle of Prell and it would slowly sink to the bottom. Now is there a way to test motor oil.


Why do you assume it has either summer or winter oil, rather than mutigrade oil such as 10w40 for both winter and summer? Very very few people use monograde oil thesedays.

Richard in Anaheim CA 04-08-2020 12:33 AM

Re: Oil viscosity test
 

Your wife won't appreciate receiving her pearls back drenched in drain oil.

40 Deluxe 04-08-2020 05:28 PM

Re: Oil viscosity test
 

Quote:

Originally Posted by dean from bozeman (Post 1871357)
Here's a question for you old timers or someone who learned from an old timer. Is there a "homegrown" method to determine an oil's viscosity?

Basically, how can you tell whether a car has winter or summer oil?

I remember the Prell shampoo commercial when I was a kid. They would put a pearl into a bottle of Prell and it would slowly sink to the bottom. Now is there a way to test motor oil.




If you have to severely whip the horse to get it to pull your car, you have summer oil (Grandpa's method ). When Dad told me the story he had a sad look and said "That was mean!"

ursus 04-08-2020 08:04 PM

Re: Oil viscosity test
 

On the farm, Dad had two kinds of oil - SAE 30 and SAE 20W - that he bought in bulk from the Texaco distributor and carried home in small unmarked drums.
When he forgot which was which, he dipped a screwdriver in up to the handle and counted the seconds it took for a drop to fall. Worked every time.


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