
Cold Weather Gear Changes
#1
Posted 28 February 2013 - 05:13 PM
#2
Posted 28 February 2013 - 05:27 PM

#3
Posted 28 February 2013 - 05:31 PM
#4
Posted 28 February 2013 - 05:37 PM
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
Buy our oil
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
Are you really a moderator? If so, I find that quite worrying...
You sound more like an idiot in a playground

Cheers
#5
Posted 28 February 2013 - 06:16 PM
#6
Posted 28 February 2013 - 07:00 PM
40degc may not seem cold but this is the temperature at which the viscosity is measured and is the information you will find on the oil technical data sheets.
It's quoted at 40 deg. C for manufacturing plants to know how to handle it. It's not for a technical application of the oil.
Your advice is mainly correct, however I would suggest to you that it costs about £20 to run a KV at any temperature, if you want to provide useful data to explain which oil someone should pick, i'd spend that £20 per gear oil to have a KV measured at 0 deg. C, or even -10 deg. C to actually rank them at a temperature where shifting becomes an issue. This is because temperature responses are rarely linear due to the different solubilities of the oils and additives so the relative viscosities at 40 deg. C don't translate to lower temps.
#7
Posted 28 February 2013 - 07:03 PM

#8
Posted 28 February 2013 - 07:04 PM
Could not have put it better myself. Thanks Fezz
40degc may not seem cold but this is the temperature at which the viscosity is measured and is the information you will find on the oil technical data sheets.
It's quoted at 40 deg. C for manufacturing plants to know how to handle it. It's not for a technical application of the oil.
Your advice is mainly correct, however I would suggest to you that it costs about £20 to run a KV at any temperature, if you want to provide useful data to explain which oil someone should pick, i'd spend that £20 per gear oil to have a KV measured at 0 deg. C, or even -10 deg. C to actually rank them at a temperature where shifting becomes an issue. This is because temperature responses are rarely linear due to the different solubilities of the oils and additives so the relative viscosities at 40 deg. C don't translate to lower temps.
#9
Posted 28 February 2013 - 07:22 PM

#10
Posted 28 February 2013 - 07:25 PM
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
Buy our oil
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
:P/>
Are you really a moderator? If so, I find that quite worrying...
You sound more like an idiot in a playground :rolleyes:/>
Cheers
Yeah and you're selling crack at the gate under the pretence that it's Sherbet

#11
Posted 28 February 2013 - 09:21 PM
He just put it in a slightly more polite way than me
For the majority of vx owners, cold gear selection has absolutely nothing to do with gearbox oil and all to do with cable issues.
BINGO!!!
But all the first post will be on all the fora 'he' posts on and if it gets a few sales from numpties then so be it.
I do love the dopey adverts on Motors Tv, its like they spent a whole 10pence on it

#12
Posted 28 February 2013 - 09:30 PM
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
Buy our oil
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
:P/>
Are you really a moderator? If so, I find that quite worrying...
You sound more like an idiot in a playground :rolleyes:/>
Cheers
Yeah and you're selling crack at the gate under the pretence that it's Sherbet ;)/>
Tsk, tsk JG. What happened to your "If I've got nothing nice to say..."

#13
Posted 28 February 2013 - 10:31 PM


#14
Posted 01 March 2013 - 08:48 AM
40degc may not seem cold but this is the temperature at which the viscosity is measured and is the information you will find on the oil technical data sheets.
It's quoted at 40 deg. C for manufacturing plants to know how to handle it. It's not for a technical application of the oil.
Your advice is mainly correct, however I would suggest to you that it costs about £20 to run a KV at any temperature, if you want to provide useful data to explain which oil someone should pick, i'd spend that £20 per gear oil to have a KV measured at 0 deg. C, or even -10 deg. C to actually rank them at a temperature where shifting becomes an issue. This is because temperature responses are rarely linear due to the different solubilities of the oils and additives so the relative viscosities at 40 deg. C don't translate to lower temps.
Thanks for the additional info fezzasus, I will look further into that.
Cheers
#15
Posted 01 March 2013 - 08:50 AM
Other than being annoying are stiff cold gearchanges a problem? I'm always a bit wary of forcing it into first in the cold. I live at the top of a big hill so maybe i should just leave it parked in 2nd and roll down the first bit
No, it will do no harm as long as nothing is forced.
Cheers
#16
Posted 01 March 2013 - 08:52 AM
He just put it in a slightly more polite way than me
For the majority of vx owners, cold gear selection has absolutely nothing to do with gearbox oil and all to do with cable issues.
Maybe so, and I dont doubt there are cable issues. This is just general info, for those that are interested.
Cheers
#17
Posted 01 March 2013 - 08:53 AM
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
Buy our oil
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
lots of useless drivel
:P/>
Are you really a moderator? If so, I find that quite worrying...
You sound more like an idiot in a playground :rolleyes:/>
Cheers
Yeah and you're selling crack at the gate under the pretence that it's Sherbet
Ok, you got me there... Hmmm sherbet

Cheers
#18
Posted 01 March 2013 - 08:59 AM
He just put it in a slightly more polite way than me
For the majority of vx owners, cold gear selection has absolutely nothing to do with gearbox oil and all to do with cable issues.
BINGO!!!
But all the first post will be on all the fora 'he' posts on and if it gets a few sales from numpties then so be it.
I do love the dopey adverts on Motors Tv, its like they spent a whole 10pence on it
If I get sales from it then ideal, but not sure how I would know that... This is a general info post, there are not links to my site etc. We make many other posts that are very much sales focussed with offers, competitions etc.
Glad you like my adds

Cheers
Guy
#19
Posted 01 March 2013 - 01:41 PM

#20
Posted 01 March 2013 - 02:49 PM
How can it be anything other than an advertising post...
That is quite simple... This is an advertising post http://www.vx220.org...oon-25-off-rrp/
My first post on this thread does not state any prices, recommendations, discounts, links etc. It is just information. To me there is quite a difference.
lots of stuff to baffle the masses
Do you not understand it?
and then your sig with links to the shop as if by magic people will go there and buy (if they are panicked enough)
What are they going to buy if the masses are baffled? I have not suggested anything.
Yes my sig has links in it, this seems to be acceptable here. Mr Moderator JG has commercial links in his sig, does that mean every post he makes is an advertising post?
Cheers
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