by Puffs » Wed Sep 26, 2018 6:06 am
What you're saying there surprises me a bit: a clutch slipping with 10W/40 semi synthetic, but not with 20W/50 mineral. Or maybe is it not slipping now because you replaced parts and increased the spring strengths?
In another (Suzuki) 4T I also had a slipping clutch, using 10W/40, but that stopped slipping too after changing the plates - while still using 10W/40. Maybe I also put rings below the springs to increase preload. Anyway, I think you best not use a thicker viscosity than prescribed by the manufacturer, for the conditions/temperature you use the bike in. To use a thicker oil may reduce the flow through some oil channels (towards particularly the head, OHC journals) & jeopardise lubrication when the engine is still cold.
On clutch slipping & oil viscosity: normally thicker oil will promote clutch slippage. This is because of the following: when you engage the clutch, you pull the plates apart and oil enters between the plates. It forms an oil film between the plates. Then when you release the clutch, the plates are pressed together again by the spring(s), and the oil is pressed out. A thicker oil takes longer to be expelled, and causes a softer 'landing'. And has a higher film strength, lubricates more, so that the plates have a higher chance of slipping wrt each other. This is why the YZ (+/-55 HP) uses such a thin gearbox oil, and race bikes, cars & some old MX bikes have a dry clutch.
As an aside, my wife's bike (a push rod 4T) has a clutch that has been on the verge of slipping, for about 15k miles now. When the oil is still cold, you can feel the clutch is reluctant to catch at full throttle. To combat that, & avoid having to work on the clutch, I've been mixing in a bit of 5W/40 into the 10W/40, thus reducing the cold viscosity a bit. So far that works fine.
On replacing oil: I believe replacement intervals are more dependent on use, rather than time. Because of shear under high temperature molecules break down, causing oil degradation, and the other effect is that (metal) particles have separated from the grinding surfaces & stay in suspension in the oil (and enhance wear). Both these effects are only dependent on use; oil not being used but kept at ambient temperature will keep for millions of years.
In fact, for these old bikes I recycle the gear oil. If you let gear oil stand for a few years, it becomes completely clear again. I decant it & re-use the clear fraction. This does not work for engine oil, because engine oil has additives which keep the smallest particles in suspension: it never clears. And also, (4T) engine oil has been exposed to much higher temperatures, you do not want to re-use it. Gear oil never really gets hot - unless you ride with a slipping clutch.
Brake fluid, sometimes also thought of as an oil, is hygroscopic: it absorbs humidity from the air. That water then disperses throughout the system & causes corrosion, as well as a reduction of the boiling point. That needs to be replaced on a time basis, depending on the climate you life in (normally 2 or 3 years).
Last edited by
Puffs on Mon Jan 06, 2025 7:20 am, edited 2 times in total.