Valvoline meets the requirement but some other brands may also. Read the specs on the bottle to find out.
mobil makes the oil
Among Motorcraft oils, it would be the synthetic or synthetic blend 5W20 Among other oils, most synthetic blends and synthetics meeting 5W20 and 0W20 will meet it
Most oils will, just look on the bottle. They will list it if it meets it. Penzzoil Platinum and Ultra meet it, and thats why I use. Castrol Synthetic does. Mobil 1 used to, although I have read they do not anymore.
Statoil LazerWay F 5W30
Apparently, there is no real certification for "therapeutic grade oils." Some bloggers have issued "buyer beware" notices for places that advertise that their oils meet this criteria. That being said, LorAnn Oils and Mountain Rose Herbs Co. got recommendations as having good products.
Yes, GM has now made that standard to meet the minimum requirements for blended oils. This is the reason they have created DEXOS.
No, but find out the requirements for the motor. Most normal motor oils don't meet manufactures requirements for wear protection.
There are 2 kinds of oils that needed by our body : Fatty acid oils, which you can get from butter and meat Non fatty acid oils, which you can get from oils.
The healthiest oils are oils that have polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats. The healthiest oils are oils packed with saturated fats.
no other oils can be mixed
The General Motors oil specification in question, GM6094M, denotes specific loads and temperatures to be met in the test lab.Independent research has not uncovered the specific goals of GM6094M, but quickly showed that many synthetic and mineral based oils meet the requirements, so there is nothing too exotic about this engine oil requirements. Both Havoline (mineral) and Redline (synthetic) 5W-30 oils meet this specification, for example, so a number of oils should work. From an older post on GM TechLink website, here is a list of oils that met this spec (circa 2005): http://forums.genvibe.com/zerofile/7142/synthgd.pdf