mkII 1.8 'tappetty'
Discussion
Cheers for the replies. I have checked the oil, I only picked her up on Tuesday and she'd just had an oil change. To be fair she doesn't sound that bad, just a bit less smooth than the Toyota twin cam engine I had previously. You can sort of hear a sewing machine like sound, particularly at 2250 revs.
phil_cardiff said:
Cheers for the replies. I have checked the oil, I only picked her up on Tuesday and she'd just had an oil change. To be fair she doesn't sound that bad, just a bit less smooth than the Toyota twin cam engine I had previously. You can sort of hear a sewing machine like sound, particularly at 2250 revs.
Simple solution Always rev above 2250. HTHOr seriously I dont consider the MX5 engine to be the most ... refined ...
phil_cardiff said:
Cheers for the replies. I have checked the oil, I only picked her up on Tuesday and she'd just had an oil change. To be fair she doesn't sound that bad, just a bit less smooth than the Toyota twin cam engine I had previously. You can sort of hear a sewing machine like sound, particularly at 2250 revs.
MK1 or MK2 MR2? My MK2 1.8 is a definitely less refined engine (I feel) than the AW-11 in my old MK1 MR2's. Still a nice engine to use though.It was actually a 1.6 afe in a Corolla. Say what you want about the car but that engine was bloody good.
My car is probably fine and I've just got a case of the 'new car nerves'. I'll save up and take it to the Mazda stealer next time a service is due and get them to give it the once over.
About time I learnt to be more mechanically minded too.
My car is probably fine and I've just got a case of the 'new car nerves'. I'll save up and take it to the Mazda stealer next time a service is due and get them to give it the once over.
About time I learnt to be more mechanically minded too.
LexSport said:
Lazza, as you have a Mk2, I bow to your experience, but how does an oil change affect mechanical lifters?
It doesn't really affect the lifters in the same way as it does on a Mk1 but the valves, buckets etc can stick which will cause a rattle.My mk2.5 rattles when the oil is getting old but I'm told that's the VVT rather than the tappets.
It may have had an oil change but what oil was used?
A 10w/40 is the common thing but a 10w/30 semi synthetic or a fully synthetic 5w/30 should be used.
If there are moving parts and the oil has burnt leaving a varnish on the surface this will stop lubrication of these aprts, creat hot spots and cause noise.
Common problem is the mistake of car owners thinking that a ficker oil will solve the problem, this will only make matters worse.
Mobil 1 suggested is a good oil but it is a 0w/40, great for a little track use but for fast road use the 5w/30 would be a better choice.
A 10w/40 is the common thing but a 10w/30 semi synthetic or a fully synthetic 5w/30 should be used.
If there are moving parts and the oil has burnt leaving a varnish on the surface this will stop lubrication of these aprts, creat hot spots and cause noise.
Common problem is the mistake of car owners thinking that a ficker oil will solve the problem, this will only make matters worse.
Mobil 1 suggested is a good oil but it is a 0w/40, great for a little track use but for fast road use the 5w/30 would be a better choice.
5W-30 is actually a bad choice - it doesn't have enough viscosity when hot due in part to the fact it's only a 30 grade oil but also it's a fuel economy grade mostly as it's a ford spec (also recently a VW spec). this means that it thins down more than a normal oil in the bearings to give you less viscous loss - but also less protection. check the back of the packs - 5W-30 oils will tend to be ACEA A1/B1 specs and carry ford 912B - non fuel economy oils are A3/B3/B4 which is the specification that the mx5 requires.
a 0W-40 like mobil 1 will be better in *all* circumstances
a 0W-40 like mobil 1 will be better in *all* circumstances
as an industry insider you should know that 5W-30 is *the* most common grade for fuel economy oils which just aren't recommended (AFAIK, possibly in the mk2 / mk3?) or required in the 5. as for my credentials on road car oils, i ran the castrol technical help line for a year, answering questions from people, dealerships, and workshops, about what oil to use in what car etc
here's opie oils pages on all their 5W-30 oils
http://www.opieoils.co.uk/c-653-5w-30.aspx
fuchs titan xtr 5W-30 ACEA A5/B5, Ford 913B spec
castrol magnatec 5W-30 ACEA A1/B1, Ford 913B
Motul 8100 5W-30 ACEA A5/B5
fuchs titan gt1 pro c-1 5W-30 ACEA A5/B5
Mobil 1 ESP 5W-30 ACEA A3/B3/B4 but meets A5/B5
amsoil synthetic 5W-30 ACEA A5/B5
A1/B1 and A5/B5 are the fuel economy specifications which means that the oil has a low HTHS (high temperature high shear) simply meaning that it shears or thins down under conditions like bearings. this *will* give you less protection than a high HTHS oil, especially if the engine is not designed for it and i know my mk1 definitely isn't.
of course, there are non-FE 5W-30's but the average punter isn't going to check all the specs so a safer recommendation would be a 0W-40 / 5W-40 / 10W-40 as these are not FE oils. they will also give more protection at high temps owing to their more favorable viscosity.
here's opie oils pages on all their 5W-30 oils
http://www.opieoils.co.uk/c-653-5w-30.aspx
fuchs titan xtr 5W-30 ACEA A5/B5, Ford 913B spec
castrol magnatec 5W-30 ACEA A1/B1, Ford 913B
Motul 8100 5W-30 ACEA A5/B5
fuchs titan gt1 pro c-1 5W-30 ACEA A5/B5
Mobil 1 ESP 5W-30 ACEA A3/B3/B4 but meets A5/B5
amsoil synthetic 5W-30 ACEA A5/B5
A1/B1 and A5/B5 are the fuel economy specifications which means that the oil has a low HTHS (high temperature high shear) simply meaning that it shears or thins down under conditions like bearings. this *will* give you less protection than a high HTHS oil, especially if the engine is not designed for it and i know my mk1 definitely isn't.
of course, there are non-FE 5W-30's but the average punter isn't going to check all the specs so a safer recommendation would be a 0W-40 / 5W-40 / 10W-40 as these are not FE oils. they will also give more protection at high temps owing to their more favorable viscosity.
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