10W-40 for Chevy 350

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

sidschev

Full Access Member
Joined
Oct 2, 2023
Posts
286
Reaction score
510
Location
Arkansas
First Name
sidney
Truck Year
1984
Truck Model
c1500
Engine Size
350
isnt the 20-50 diesel oil a detergent oil ive been told its not good fer gas engines because it cleans too good , but then when ive looked at diesel oil change that stuff is pretty nasty looking black goo....
 

Grit dog

Full Access Member
Joined
May 18, 2020
Posts
7,077
Reaction score
12,446
Location
Auburn, Washington
First Name
Todd
Truck Year
1986, 1977
Truck Model
K20, C10
Engine Size
454, 350
isnt the 20-50 diesel oil a detergent oil ive been told its not good fer gas engines because it cleans too good , but then when ive looked at diesel oil change that stuff is pretty nasty looking black goo....
Basically all engine oils are detergent oils.
Afaik only SAE 30W is non detergent.
You’d use non detergent oil in things like compressors or some hydraulic applications.
 

Ricko1966

Full Access Member
Joined
Apr 11, 2017
Posts
5,593
Reaction score
9,106
Location
kansas
First Name
Rick
Truck Year
1975
Truck Model
c20
Engine Size
350
isnt the 20-50 diesel oil a detergent oil ive been told its not good fer gas engines because it cleans too good , but then when ive looked at diesel oil change that stuff is pretty nasty looking black goo....
No 20w50 castrol is a common gas engine oil real popular with air cooled. The rotella t4 15/40 is labeled as a diesel oil, but recommended by their tech line on gas flat tappet cars because of the still high dzzp content.
 
Last edited:

Buck69

Full Access Member
Joined
Feb 2, 2023
Posts
227
Reaction score
294
Location
Northern British Columbia
First Name
John
Truck Year
1986
Truck Model
D30 CUCV
Engine Size
6.2 (removed)
Castrol 20-50 is dirt cheap. Has been for a while. Not good or necessary for a tight new engine IMO or anything less than warm weather but it’ll run fine in a small block or a LS.
I only posted because the OP was questioning concerns of cold start differences between 10/30 and 10/40. There is none. Didn't see where anyone else answered that.
I have never looked at the Castrol. I was referencing the mercury oil making a point that these engines don't mind heavier grades of oils. I did make a mistake on their recommended grade though. It is actually a 25/40. They are asking close to $30/ltr now in these necks for it. I do run it in my 25 merc jet but it only takes 1.5 ltrs and is under warranty. Will never catch me putting it in my 350 at that price, but lots of people do.
 

Drauka99

Full Access Member
Joined
Apr 24, 2023
Posts
95
Reaction score
276
Location
Northwest Florida, USA
First Name
David
Truck Year
1981
Truck Model
C-10
Engine Size
6.0 LQ4
Basically all engine oils are detergent oils.
Afaik only SAE 30W is non detergent.
You’d use non detergent oil in things like compressors or some hydraulic applications.
Yeah you have to look for non-detergent oil.

I was sold on the 15-40 after I bought my work vehicle, 2004 Blazer with a 4.3 V6. It had 110k on it as a government vehicle. I put 4000 miles on it with regular driving, went to do a normal oil change and the oil looked basically like it had just been poured in. I know it’s from good maintenance before me but 15-40 is what they were using and I’ve never had an engine oil look so good after 4k so I continued it. The particular brand they used is only available in drums so I went with Shell
 

GTX63

Full Access Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2022
Posts
955
Reaction score
3,883
Location
Tennessee
First Name
Ty
Truck Year
1985
Truck Model
K10
Engine Size
350
Chevy valve stem seals don't cost much more than a jug of heavy oil. A cheap valve spring compressor and some rope and you can change the seals out in an afternoon without a compressor.
 

Grit dog

Full Access Member
Joined
May 18, 2020
Posts
7,077
Reaction score
12,446
Location
Auburn, Washington
First Name
Todd
Truck Year
1986, 1977
Truck Model
K20, C10
Engine Size
454, 350
I only posted because the OP was questioning concerns of cold start differences between 10/30 and 10/40. There is none. Didn't see where anyone else answered that.
I have never looked at the Castrol. I was referencing the mercury oil making a point that these engines don't mind heavier grades of oils. I did make a mistake on their recommended grade though. It is actually a 25/40. They are asking close to $30/ltr now in these necks for it. I do run it in my 25 merc jet but it only takes 1.5 ltrs and is under warranty. Will never catch me putting it in my 350 at that price, but lots of people do.
I only posted because the OP was questioning concerns of cold start differences between 10/30 and 10/40. There is none. Didn't see where anyone else answered that.
I have never looked at the Castrol. I was referencing the mercury oil making a point that these engines don't mind heavier grades of oils. I did make a mistake on their recommended grade though. It is actually a 25/40. They are asking close to $30/ltr now in these necks for it. I do run it in my 25 merc jet but it only takes 1.5 ltrs and is under warranty. Will never catch me putting it in my 350 at that price, but lots of people do.
My bad, I didn’t realize you were speaking about a small 4s outboard. I presumed since we basically only talk about Chevy trucks here that you were referring to marinized small blocks and big blocks, not a type of engine that is completely different.
And your prices are not the norm. Or even close. Never heard of 25W40 but looked it up and it’s $30-40 USD a gallon here. Unless you buy Scamzoil.
And I’ve never heard of anyone running it in a vehicle. But I don’t live in Northern BC.
 

Buck69

Full Access Member
Joined
Feb 2, 2023
Posts
227
Reaction score
294
Location
Northern British Columbia
First Name
John
Truck Year
1986
Truck Model
D30 CUCV
Engine Size
6.2 (removed)
All good @Grit dog. You think our specialty oils are ridiculous in small town northern bc? You should see what they ask for a bottle of water in the stores while all our rivers are all fed from short runs from glaciers.
Mercury recommends 25/40 in all their engines (including the 350 sterndrives). It is FC-W (marine) and a bad example for all purposes of this thread. The viscosity numbers were what I was getting at.
Regardless, I just use 15/40 in my (sb 350) inboard. Just whatever leftovers are laying around the shop from different jobs. My daily driver is a duramax and gets the same. I splurge with the 6.7 in the service truck but it runs around at 8600Kg. It gets 5/40 @ 16/ltr.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_7492.JPG
    IMG_7492.JPG
    217.9 KB · Views: 47

squaredeal91

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 10, 2023
Posts
2,589
Reaction score
4,711
Location
Cave junction Oregon
First Name
Greg bush
Truck Year
1991 SB
Truck Model
K30
Engine Size
5.9 Cummins 12 valve
Yeah you have to look for non-detergent oil.

I was sold on the 15-40 after I bought my work vehicle, 2004 Blazer with a 4.3 V6. It had 110k on it as a government vehicle. I put 4000 miles on it with regular driving, went to do a normal oil change and the oil looked basically like it had just been poured in. I know it’s from good maintenance before me but 15-40 is what they were using and I’ve never had an engine oil look so good after 4k so I continued it. The particular brand they used is only available in drums so I went with Shell
I've run 15w40 in most of my rigs for years off and on diesel and small blocks alike. As long as it's not the cheap red cap delo. Forget that $#!t.
 

potent rodent

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 22, 2020
Posts
195
Reaction score
112
Location
indiana
First Name
butch
Truck Year
86 and 78
Truck Model
1500
Engine Size
350 and 305
diesel is very high detergant and it has no zddp in it no more its not made for gas eng period
 

Grit dog

Full Access Member
Joined
May 18, 2020
Posts
7,077
Reaction score
12,446
Location
Auburn, Washington
First Name
Todd
Truck Year
1986, 1977
Truck Model
K20, C10
Engine Size
454, 350
why do u run diesel oil ?
Because it generally has very good shear stability and used to be decidedly cheaper to buy in volume. Also the simplicity of it. With a dozen or more small engines and automobile engines, in my climate it’s mostly a one size fits all solution.
Also in high load gas v8 applications, like boat engines, it has traditionally been recommended by the company that marinizes the engines.
 

Grit dog

Full Access Member
Joined
May 18, 2020
Posts
7,077
Reaction score
12,446
Location
Auburn, Washington
First Name
Todd
Truck Year
1986, 1977
Truck Model
K20, C10
Engine Size
454, 350
diesel is very high detergant and it has no zddp in it no more its not made for gas eng period
Ok, sounds like you feel strongly about it. Good news is they sell 100 flavors of oil. Pick the one you like. I thought you were asking a question, not a leading question.
 

MikeB

Full Access Member
Joined
Apr 4, 2014
Posts
1,782
Reaction score
1,020
Location
North Texas
First Name
Mike
Truck Year
1969
Truck Model
C10
Engine Size
355

I had a self-inflicted problem where I pinched a couple valve stem o-rings many years ago, which let oil run off the retainers down the valve stems. These seals solved the "white smoke on startup" problem 100%. I think mine were Fel-Pro. They were in stock at my O'Reilly Auto store.

You must be registered for see images attach
 

mrdap

Full Access Member
Joined
Jul 15, 2012
Posts
192
Reaction score
134
Location
USA
First Name
C/K_Lover
Truck Year
81-91
Truck Model
C20/K30/V15/V2500
Engine Size
350/454
Because Chevy says to use 10w30 lol. It actually smokes a lot less on startup now. There's still some but a lot less.
The main reason GM and Chevrolet and all the other manufacturers have gone to recommending lighter weight oils, (such as 10W-30) is to reduce their corporate fuel economy MPG ratings. Average to cost millions of vehicles maybe they gain a point here and. I doubt whether an individual would ever see a difference in gas mileage going from 10W-30 to 10W40.
Should not be a problem, as others have said, unless you're operating and very cold temperatures. This is only because it's more difficult to spin a cold engine with thick oil than it is with thin oil.
 

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
44,400
Posts
956,650
Members
36,709
Latest member
85squarebody805
Top