Mark Olson <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
> The Older Gentleman wrote:
>
> > Thanks for that. 150 did indeed seem a tad low, even for a gauge stuck
> > in a dry sump engine's oil tank.
> >
> > No idea what Golden Spectro oil is, nor its viscosity. The SR500 is one
> > of few bikes for which 20/50 (rather than the ubiqutous 10/40) oil is
> > recommended. As you probably know.
>
> I think 150 Fahrenheit is way too low for the oil temp.
Well, that's what I thought originally. Krusty, of course, thought
otherwise. Which was why I queried whether the gauge might be faulty.
>180F to 210F would
> be much better. I suggest the OP do some googling, and specifically,
> check out the forums at http://www.bobistheoilguy.com for some discussion
> as to why an oil temperature that is too low can be just as bad as too high.
I'll check that site out when I've got a moment. Right now, I'm about to
go into a conference.
> Yamaha originally recommended 20W-40 for the FJR until they stopped selling
> Yamalube in that viscosity. Now they recommend 20W-40 or 20W-50. I usually
> use 15W-40 Rotella T, which unlike many car oils, is JASO MA certified.
I remember my SR500 as demanding 20/50, and until then, the only other
bike I'd encountered for which it was specified was Yamaha's XS650.
Actually, I have a feeling my XS750 triple used 20/50 as well, but cba
to Google right now.
No coincidence that both the XS and SR seemed to run hot, especially if
the oil wasn't topped right up.
On the XS650, when they attached the electric start (on the XS2 - the
XS1 was kickstart-only) they lost half a litre of oil capacity, which
wasn't a good thing. Of course, that was a wet sump engine and the SR500
was/is[1] dry sump.
[1] One of the longest-lived Japanese bikes. Still on sale as a 500 in
Europe right into the late 1990s and (I think) still sold in Japan,
albeit as a 400, for Japan's licence laws.
--
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Nothing damages a machine more than an ignoramus with a manual, a
can-do attitude and a set of cheap tools