| Posted By |
Discussion Topic:
1936 gear oil
|
|
pinnsky |
06-21-2017 @ 5:23 PM
|
|
|
|
New Member
Posts: 103
Joined: Jan 2014
|
What do you recommend to use in the rear end and transmission? The service bulletins say: Transmission above freezing s.a.e 160, below 110 Rear end above freezing s.a.e 160, below 90 or 110.. Is there some modern oil that that works well for year round, not that I drive it below freezing. Thanks Tom
|
pinnsky |
06-23-2017 @ 9:17 AM
|
|
|
|
New Member
Posts: 103
Joined: Jan 2014
|
Any help would be appreciated.
|
carcrazy |
06-23-2017 @ 12:30 PM
|
|
|
|
Senior
Posts: 1979
Joined: Oct 2009
|
For the rear axle and transmission I would use a modern High Performance Gear Oil such as Valvoline SAE 80W-90 API Services: GL-5, MT-1. You can leave this oil in the transmission and rear axle year round.
|
pinnsky |
06-23-2017 @ 1:00 PM
|
|
|
|
New Member
Posts: 103
Joined: Jan 2014
|
What would you think of Citgo Mystik JT-7 API GL-2 through GL-5 and MT-1 ? Thanks for your help. It is SAE 85W-140.
This message was edited by pinnsky on 6-23-17 @ 1:01 PM
|
len47merc |
06-23-2017 @ 1:10 PM
|
|
|
|
Senior
Posts: 1168
Joined: Oct 2013
|
carcrazy gave you very good advice. Your name-brand preference will be fine - he likes Valvoline, well, so do I btw for the '47, but choose your name-brand and go with it. Since I live in central-humid-as-heck 95-100 degree summer NC I do run 85W-140 in the rear during summer months but only change to this if going on a long (100+ mile one-way) cruise, otherwise run 80W-90 in both for year-round putzin' around town.
Steve
|