srah1953
Well-Known Member
What`s the principal difference between gear oil and engine oil? Can gear oil be substituted for engine oil or vice versa?
Thanks
Thanks
A lot of gearboxes run on engine oil (in fact the majority of cars use the engine oil to also lubricate the gearbox).
What`s the principal difference between gear oil and engine oil? Can gear oil be substituted for engine oil or vice versa?
Thanks
I may be being a bit thick/senile, but I've never had a car with shared oils. Except Land Rovers. They distribute their oil everywhere.
I may be being a bit thick/senile, but I've never had a car with shared oils. Except Land Rovers. They distribute their oil everywhere.
Some examples:-
https://www.quora.com/How-do-four-s...red-gearbox-lubricate-What-system-do-they-use
Most motorcycle engines share engine oil with gearbox oil, which means the oil has to do a different job than in an engine-only cases.
To add to this a lot of motorcycles use a “wet” clutch which is submerged in oil too.
In terms of the engine itself it doesn't really do much special, it will have a normal oil pump.
The magic happens in the oil, it is specially formulated for the application. It has additives to help the clutch while still maintaining a nice slick surface between the gears. This is why you should never use car oil in a motorbike, and also why the service intervals are shorter on a motorbike. Some bikes have service intervals measured in hours! (The KTM 500 EXC has a 30 hour service interval)
Fun fact, the classic mini also shares it's engine oil with the gearbox, but as the clutch is “dry” it can get away with normal car oil, albeit with a shorter service interval than a typical car.
Ahah, I think I knew and had forgotten about the Mini (never owned one and I'm too tall to enjoy driving them). Bikes I certainly knew about, rebuilt quite a few, but car-wise, apart from the A series engine are there any others?
Ahah, I think I knew and had forgotten about the Mini (never owned one and I'm too tall to enjoy driving them). Bikes I certainly knew about, rebuilt quite a few, but car-wise, apart from the A series engine are there any others?
As for engine oil in a gearbox, I used to have a mate who designed gearboxes for a living. He used to describe the action of the gears as chopping up all of the molecular strands in the oil over time and said that gear oil was formulated especially to prevent this (or the gearbox designed to run on engine oil as in the Austin mini).Ahhhhh, typed two responśes, both deleted before posting. This website is rubbish.
Sealed for life - no, manufacturing spin designed for fleet buyers. Every car I've ever come across that has a sealed for life box has an approved way of changing the oil...
GL4 vs GL5. Can't remember which way around it is, but one has more of the additive which makes it stick to the gears. And which eats yellow metal bearings. So use the 'GL rating' your box manufacturer recommends.
Sealed for life - no, manufacturing spin designed for fleet buyers. Every car I've ever come across that has a sealed for life box has an approved way of changing the oil...
my first response (deleted by this rubbish website) quoted your 'filled for life'. Engineers I know scoff at the idea. One makes his money as an 'expert witness' and sees many failed gearboxes that he tells me would have lived if they'd been serviced. Mainly LandRover Discoveries it seems, but then I own one and I think he likes to try to frighten me with all of the expensive failures which require the body to come off in order to fix (gearbox, turbo, parts of the exhaust system, brake pipes etc, not to mention crank failure, oil pump/cambelt failure, suspension faults etc, why do I do it to myself...?)I assume that is not a reply to my post as I didn't use the phrase "sealed for life" and I went on to explain that I changed to gearbox oil at 100k.
I'm sure that there is no technical reason with modern synthetic oils that gearboxes cannot effectively be filled for life. My new car's computer is projecting its very first oil and filter change at over 25,000 miles. If a high performance engine can manage that kind of mileage straight off the production line then a gearbox at 100k should be a doddle.
Richard
my first response (deleted by this rubbish website) quoted your 'filled for life'. Engineers I know scoff at the idea. One makes his money as an 'expert witness' and sees many failed gearboxes that he tells me would have lived if they'd been serviced. Mainly LandRover Discoveries it seems, but then I own one and I think he likes to try to frighten me with all of the expensive failures which require the body to come off in order to fix (gearbox, turbo, parts of the exhaust system, brake pipes etc, not to mention crank failure, oil pump/cambelt failure, suspension faults etc, why do I do it to myself...?)
Another designs print heads for a living (as far as I can tell), but is a chartered engineer and worked in automotive for years. He has a 'megaflush' done regularly on his Range Rover and his Jag. Reckons the boxes shift much better and will last much longer - not that he'll ever find out, he doesn't keep them long enough.
Common theme JLR? Maybe, dunno. My old volvo (have an XC70 too for when the Landy breaks down!) really needs a megaflush too.
I challenge your 100k is 'life' though. That's what I mean by advertising puff for the fleet managers. Even Fords have 6 digits on the odo these days...
Ahah, I think I knew and had forgotten about the Mini (never owned one and I'm too tall to enjoy driving them). Bikes I certainly knew about, rebuilt quite a few, but car-wise, apart from the A series engine are there any others?
I may be being a bit thick/senile, but I've never had a car with shared oils. Except Land Rovers. They distribute their oil everywhere.