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- Mar 17, 2025
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- 2024 TRD Off-Road 6MT
I can't think of anyone, or a company, that would front the bucks to quantify that. So it's an easy position to take because there will never be evidence to "disprove" the logic, but absence of evidence isn't evidence of absence.The interesting part is how “physics and chemistry” always get cited as proof, while actual measured durability improvements remain mostly theoretical.
Nobody disputes that a thicker oil can provide a thicker film under certain conditions.
The debate is whether that translates into meaningful real-world durability gains in this engine beyond what Toyota already validated.
That’s the part still missing.
I remember my high school auto teacher saying Ford would change the tooling on a part if it would save ten cents each. So I asked a GM development engineer if that was true, and he said "idk about 10 cents, but if I could save 25 cents I'd go from being on a team to managing a team"
I asked for an example, and he said they determine how much aluminum is needed in a radiator by loading the vehicle to full gross weight rating and running it under full load up a long grade in the california desert at 105 degrees plus. They go thinner and thinner on the radiator cores. After the engine overheads and blows up, they go back up one size and if it passes the test, boom that was the minimum amount of aluminum they would have to use in the radiator for production.
The idea that the OEM performs exhaustive testing and recommends based on the customer's interest is la la land.
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