Both behave the same when cold but the 5W30 is slightly more viscous at high (engine operating) temperature.
That is a personal choice as to Synthetic vs Conventional, if I'm not mistaken it calls for an SAE 5W30. If the engine has NO Major Oil leaks then I would use a Synthetic Motor Oil 5W30 or even a 0W30. Hope this Helps.
Ford recommends 5w30 to be used. There are no recommendations as far as synthetic vs conventional go.
Yes, but keep in mind that 5w30 thins out at higher temperatures vs. 10w30. i.e. 5w30 is better for cooler climates than 10w30 respectively. Theoretically you could see a mpg increase with the thinner oil comparatively, just don't sacrifice proper lubrication to save a few bucks. In my '95 2.5l it never lost any oil when I ran 10w30. When I tried 5w30 it did go through some. I have a 99k engine. the oil wasn't being burnt, so I wasn't losing it quickly, I just needed to top it off after a few months. I probably had to add 1/2 quart.
An SAE 5w30 full synthetic will provide excellent protection under all conditions. Look for the new API SN rating vs. the previous SM rating.
Need to no what oil take if regular oil o use con te tic oil
There is no versus. Use exactly what the manufacture of your vehicle recommends and nothing else.
Non-detergent oil, such as SAE 30, is not used in modern passenger vehicle engines. It is still used in some gasoline engines such as lawnmowers.
There is less calories in the butter vs oil cause oil is 100% fat and butter is around 80% fat and the rest is water. Butter is 70 cal/10g and oil is 80 cal/10g.
10w fork oil. 130-140 ml from top of fork, when fork is fully compressed without the spring inside the fork.
this varies from 2 stroke oil to 2 stroke oil, but 32:1 is the recommended optimum ratio for lubrication vs. performance. ONLY USE 2 stroke premix style oil for any CR 2 stroke model Honda.
gasorheating / cooking oil vs machine oil