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Toyota brand 0w20

Discussion in '2.5 Gen Tundras (2014-2021)' started by Alloutdrs1, Sep 8, 2018.

  1. Nov 24, 2018 at 5:53 AM
    #31
    Ronin73

    Ronin73 New Member

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    If they used regular Mobil 1, then they are not putting the specd' 0w20 oil in the engine. Regular Mobil 1 does not offer a 0w20, only a 5w20. To get 0w20 you have to go with Mobil 1 Advanced Fuel Economy, Extended Performance, or Annual Protection.
     
  2. Nov 24, 2018 at 5:57 AM
    #32
    polymerhead

    polymerhead New Member

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    C’mon, man. You don’t think Toyota is a big enough customer to warrant a special blend of straight Ow20? They’re not buying it at Walmart.
     
  3. Nov 24, 2018 at 6:02 AM
    #33
    Ronin73

    Ronin73 New Member

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    No, I don't. In fact, it is against the law. The law states that an advertised oil has to be the same regardless of where it is sold and to whom. Mobil 1 says so as well. This is a quote directly from their website: "The formulation and quality level of our motor oils are the same wherever the product name is the same, regardless of the package size in which it is sold."
     
  4. Nov 24, 2018 at 6:18 AM
    #34
    polymerhead

    polymerhead New Member

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    Lol, ok man. Just trying to help. I get from your post that your mind is made up that you’re right. Remember that Toyota doesn’t sell Mobil 1. It sells Toyota brand oil. It’s not a Mobil 1 Branded SKU and doesn’t have to match anything branded Mobil 1.
     
  5. Nov 24, 2018 at 6:24 AM
    #35
    Ronin73

    Ronin73 New Member

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    My mind is made up based on the available evidence, not personal opinion, or wants. If you can show me evidence that Mobil takes the time to blend a "special" formulation of Mobil 1 that isn't available anywhere else in the world to customers just for Toyota, I would accept that evidence. Oil analysis of the Toyota branded oil indicates that it is Mobil Super, not a variation of Mobil 1, packaged in Toyota branded bottles through licensing.
     
  6. Nov 24, 2018 at 6:29 AM
    #36
    polymerhead

    polymerhead New Member

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    I don’t have any idea what’s in Toyota oil. I was just pointing out that it’s ridiculous to say there’s “a law” that Toyota can’t offer straight 0w20 because it’s not available in a Mobil 1 branded jug that way.
     
  7. Nov 24, 2018 at 6:32 AM
    #37
    polymerhead

    polymerhead New Member

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  8. Nov 24, 2018 at 6:35 AM
    #38
    Ronin73

    Ronin73 New Member

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    It isn't ridiculous if it is true, however, that is not what I said the law states. I said that the law states that an advertised oil has to be the same regardless of where it is sold and to whom, and that is a correct statement. Why are you being so combative when I am just pointing out facts? I was not being ugly or giving my opinion, just stating facts. You can disagree with me all that you like, but facts don't change just because you don't like them.

    Let it go, man.
     
  9. Nov 24, 2018 at 6:37 AM
    #39
    polymerhead

    polymerhead New Member

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    What does advertised Mobil 1 oil have to do with what’s in Toyota oil?
     
  10. Nov 24, 2018 at 6:38 AM
    #40
    Ronin73

    Ronin73 New Member

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    It's "Toyota specific" in that they looked for an oil that met their criteria for additives, and Mobil Super met that criteria. It certainly doesn't say that it is Toyota made and mixed additives. You're reaching now.
     
  11. Nov 24, 2018 at 6:42 AM
    #41
    Ronin73

    Ronin73 New Member

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    Because further up in this thread, a poster claimed that Toyota oil was regular Mobil 1, which doesn't have the correct Toyota spec and I corrected that assertion. Then, you chimed in and implied that Toyota and Mobil have an agreement for a special blend of 0w20, which is also incorrect. There is no supportable evidence of that.
     
  12. Nov 24, 2018 at 6:44 AM
    #42
    polymerhead

    polymerhead New Member

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    It’s all good, man. I’m just gonna leave this here and then I’m out. It just rubs me the wrong way when someone says “in fact” and then ridiculousness pours out after. Feel free to have the last word on this.

    7B245BA7-8BEB-4B16-BD86-5798BB0EB7FA.jpg
     
  13. Nov 24, 2018 at 6:50 AM
    #43
    Ronin73

    Ronin73 New Member

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    I apologize. You are absolutely correct. I do not know what I am talking about in the lest. Thank you.
     
  14. Nov 24, 2018 at 8:18 AM
    #44
    netranger6

    netranger6 New Member

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    None. Keeping this one stock.
    Amsoil. Signature. Every 6 k
     
  15. Nov 24, 2018 at 8:22 AM
    #45
    Thattundradude

    Thattundradude New Member

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    I used pennzoil 0w-20 didn't notice anything difference yet
     
  16. Nov 24, 2018 at 9:46 AM
    #46
    KirthGersen

    KirthGersen New Member

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    The Toyota FAQ referred to,
    http://toyota.custhelp.com/app/answ...~/can-i-use-any-brand-of-0w-20-synthetic-oil?
    also states:
    " However, other 0W-20 synthetic oils can be used as long as they are ILSAC certified, "

    I keep on-hand a qt of Valvoline 0W20 synthetic, product code VV916 , and it's ILSAC certified on the bottle.
    https://www.valvoline.com/our-products/motor-oil/advanced-full-synthetic-motor-oil

    Also note, Tundra service manual specifies 0W20 for USA & Canada, but Mexico has wider range of approved oil :

    API grade SL "Energy-Conserving", SM "Energy-Conserving", SN "Resource-Conserving" or ILSAC GF-5 multigrade engine oil : 0W-20 , 5W-20 , 5W-30 , 10W-30
    or
    API grade SL, SM or SN multigrade engine oil : 15W-40 , 20W-50​

    Does anyone really think engines destined for mexico are machined to different tolerances, or manufactured with different bearings & materials than USA/Canada?!

    0W is advantageous for fast lubrication upon startup , and very cold temps ... but the mania for 0W oils is indirectly dictated by US gov't mandates for fuel economy.
    When the 3UR engine's tolerances start getting sloppier in 50K-75K miles, 0W20 doesnt seem the wisest choice ... at such time 5W30, 5W40, 0W40 may be a better choice. Many German cars already use 0W40 as their factory fill.
     
    nowayout and B737 like this.
  17. Nov 24, 2018 at 11:51 AM
    #47
    nowayout

    nowayout New Member

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    For some reason running 0w-20 in our V8 rubs me the wrong way. I would feel more comfortable running 5-20 or 5-30
     
  18. Nov 24, 2018 at 12:37 PM
    #48
    B737

    B737 Throbbing Member

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    +1 I do it cause Toyota says so, but im not cool with it.
    Its interesting @KirthGersen mentioned regarding the recommended grades for Mexico. I know nothing of the internal tolerances of the 3UR but this thing cant be rocket science, its a toyota.
     

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