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The oil inside the cylinders will flash upwards becoming warmer than the oil temp guage reads. Thus, slowly heating the oil. But the operating temp of the engine means the coolant inside the engine is rising and that heat via the coolant is returning that heat to the radiator, whereby it's warming the oil as well (provided you have a coolant cooled oil cooler). You can tell when the oil is warm also by watching the oil pressure. As it heats, it will lower the pressure. I do not run my engines to high rpm when the oil pressure is higher than normal operating pressure. It tells me the oil is not flowing like it normally does.....it's flowing "slower", so I do not need to run my engine at higher rpm since the oil is not flowing as it should, thereby taking the chance of causing more wear on the engine/bearing rotating assembly or just higher wear than otherwise would running at higher rpm's. |
Yes it is all about the flow . I like a thin oil better flow. mac
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