sirkdev
Active VIP Member
Anybody have any suggestions on where to buy Diesel engine oil looking for 5w40, have been using UFA and Canadian Tire, are dealers any cheaper or heavy equipment dealers that you have experienced?
How much you need?Anybody have any suggestions on where to buy Diesel engine oil looking for 5w40, have been using UFA and Canadian Tire, are dealers any cheaper or heavy equipment dealers that you have experienced?
not a huge amount pail here and there kind of thing have a few friends that may be interested in a bulk purchase type thing. Likely 12 pails a year maybe more. I usually wait for the sales and works out to $10/L kind of thing. just wondering if anyone has any better ideas.How much you need?
I'll check my price per pail tomorrow at work for you.not a huge amount pail here and there kind of thing have a few friends that may be interested in a bulk purchase type thing. Likely 12 pails a year maybe more. I usually wait for the sales and works out to $10/L kind of thing. just wondering if anyone has any better ideas.
I'll check my price per pail tomorrow at work for you.
That is interesting.So had an interesting chat with an oil salesman from Petrocan and some points that I never thought about. His comments were everyone gets stuck on having the most pimped out oil full syn. etc when in reality the biggest killer on emissions equipped trucks is fuel dilution and the only way to deal with that is change oil and good running engine. So.. his thoughts are, back down on the oil to a mid-tier type oil and change it more frequently. Unless you need the extreme protection that a full syn offers. There is pros and cons both ways as the full syn has better add packages to carry soot etc. But at the end of the day good combustion and frequent oil changes win.
Thinking out loud...
He actually commented also on running premium diesel and or regular with an additive as better combustion leads to less soot and wear which leads to less contamination in your oil to begin with.
I cant wait until warranty is up and get this deleted but until then..
How many kms left until you delete?So had an interesting chat with an oil salesman from Petrocan and some points that I never thought about. His comments were everyone gets stuck on having the most pimped out oil full syn. etc when in reality the biggest killer on emissions equipped trucks is fuel dilution and the only way to deal with that is change oil and good running engine. So.. his thoughts are, back down on the oil to a mid-tier type oil and change it more frequently. Unless you need the extreme protection that a full syn offers. There is pros and cons both ways as the full syn has better add packages to carry soot etc. But at the end of the day good combustion and frequent oil changes win.
Thinking out loud...
He actually commented also on running premium diesel and or regular with an additive as better combustion leads to less soot and wear which leads to less contamination in your oil to begin with.
I cant wait until warranty is up and get this deleted but until then..
my 13 6.7 cummins I've gained almost 5L/100 empty and 3-4 towing, plus the power difference.How many kms left until you delete?
I just did my 2017. Forgot how much of a difference it makes. The 4L/100km extra helps too
Exactly. When I Spartan tuned my Ford, could never trust the digital readout as it read 3-5L high all the time.Just make sure you hand calculate those economy numbers to verify the instrument cluster reads accurate.
Some tuners add power by modifying the injector pulse width table, so the truck may think it's injecting 110 mm^3 per stroke, but is actually doing 130 mm^3 per stroke, which can really throw off the instrument cluster fuel economy numbers.
I know with my power stroke there is a hard limit of 140 mm^3 per stroke in the ECU, after which modifying the pulse width table becomes necessary to add more fuel and make more power.
that's super interesting! I'll have to do some hand calculations, but I am seeing a tank of fuel going further KM wise.Just make sure you hand calculate those economy numbers to verify the instrument cluster reads accurate.
Some tuners add power by modifying the injector pulse width table, so the truck may think it's injecting 110 mm^3 per stroke, but is actually doing 130 mm^3 per stroke, which can really throw off the instrument cluster fuel economy numbers.
I know with my power stroke there is a hard limit of 140 mm^3 per stroke in the ECU, after which modifying the pulse width table becomes necessary to add more fuel and make more power.