
It's
Time to Prepare Your Vehicle For Winter
Many consumers use the fall months to prepare their
vehicles and equipment for winter. If there’s a weak
point in a vehicle, it seems as though the cold will
find it and create problems. Plastic becomes
brittle, fuel and lubricants can gel and extreme
cold is just plain hard on things. The winter months
bring unique challenges for lubricants and are great
for showcasing the enhanced performance benefits of
AMSOIL synthetic lubricants. Conventional lubricants
are far more susceptible to the effects of extreme
temperatures. Extreme cold at start-up can cause
oils to thicken, starving vital moving parts of
necessary lubrication. In many cases the motor oil
will thicken to the point that the vehicle will not
start. Many motorists let vehicles idle for extended
periods to warm the interior and defrost the
windows. Others create extreme heat in the engine by
plowing or getting stuck in deep snow. These are
just a few examples of the many challenges
lubricants face in a typical North American winter.
AMSOIL synthetic lubricants are formulated for
maximum cold-temperature performance, allowing quick
starts, superior protection and versatility.
Keep Engines Protected
AMSOIL synthetic motor oils provide
superior protection and performance in cold-weather
applications. They dramatically outperform
conventional petroleum motor oils, especially in the
cold. Conventional petroleum lubricants often
contain paraffins (wax). While modern refining
techniques remove most of the wax from petroleum
oil, some wax-like molecules remain. These wax-like
molecules are soluble at ambient temperatures above
freezing, but crystallize into a honeycomb-like
structure at lower temperatures and cause oil
circulation problems. At start-up, this can leave
working parts unprotected for as long as five
minutes while the oil warms to a temperature that
allows it to flow. AMSOIL synthetic motor oils
provide outstanding low-temperature fluidity for
fast, dependable winter starts and immediate
start-up protection. In addition, their superior
synthetic multi-viscosity formulations allow AMSOIL
motor oils to provide exceptional high-temperature
protection in hard-working vehicles used in severe
service winter applications. Pour point is an
indicator of an oil’s ability to flow at cold
operating temperatures. It is the lowest temperature
at which the fluid will flow. Pour point depressants
keep wax crystals in the oil
microscopically small to keep them from joining
together to form the honeycomb-like structure. They
lower the temperature at which oil will pour or flow
and are found in most motor oils designed for
cold-weather use. As synthetic motor oils do not
contain those wax crystals, they tend to offer
better cold temperature protection properties. In
fact, the following chart comparing
AMSOIL Synthetic 10W-30 Motor Oil
(ATM) with several competitive products shows that
AMSOIL synthetic motor oil remained fluid down to
-47°C/-54°F.

AMSOIL offers several other
lower-viscosity motor oils with even lower pour
points for maximum cold temperature performance,
including
AMSOIL Synthetic 5W-30 Motor Oil (ASL)
(-50°C/-58°F),
AMSOIL Signature Series Synthetic 0W-30 Motor
Oil (SSO) (-51°C/-60°F) and
AMSOIL 0W-20 Synthetic Motor Oil (ASM)
(-54°C/-65°F). AMSOIL synthetic motor oils help engines
turn over easier and flow quickly to engine parts
for critical start-up protection. Engines start
faster and wear is greatly reduced for extended
engine life. AMSOIL motor oils are available in wide
viscosity ranges for optimum performance year-round.
The Cold Crank Simulator Test determines the
apparent viscosity of lubricants at low temperatures
and high shear rates. Viscosity of lubricants under
these conditions is directly related to engine
cranking and "startability". The lower a lubricant’s
cold crank viscosity, the easier an engine will turn
over in cold temperatures. The low cold-crank
viscosity of AMSOIL synthetic motor oil reduces drag
on moving engine parts and allows engines to achieve
critical cranking speed in frigid temperatures.
Engines turn over quickly and dependably in the
coldest winter temperatures and motor oil flows to
critical areas requiring immediate lubrication,
protecting against wear at start-up.
Beyond Motor Oil
Gear lubes face many of the same
cold-weather challenges as motor oils do, and the
same basic differences between conventional and
synthetic products apply to them as well. Synthetic
gear lubes inherently possess superior cold-weather
performance characteristics and more readily provide
dependable protection. While engines, transmissions
and cooling systems use heat created by combustion
to warm up, gear oils rely on friction to warm up,
which is only generated once the gears begin to
move. This initial movement in cold weather is the
point at which gears are most susceptible to damage.
As temperature decreases, the viscosity of oil
increases. Gear lubricants with high viscosity at
cold temperatures are less efficient, and the gears
require more energy to turn. Gears and bearings in
the differential and axle housing are
splash-lubricated, and gear lubricants that are too
thick at cold temperatures can channel and starve
internal components of lubrication, which can cause
failure.
AMSOIL Severe Gear Synthetic Gear Lubes
possess excellent cold-flow properties, as evidenced
in Brookfield Viscosity Test results. Extensive
testing, the results of which are available in the
AMSOIL
A Study of Automotive Gear Lubes
White Paper (G2457), and
real-world experience have proven the Severe Gear
line’s ability to deliver exceptional performance
and protection at extremely low temperatures.
The cold pour point of
AMSOIL SEVERE GEAR® Synthetic EP 75W-90 Gear Lube is
an astonishing -50°C/-58°F.
AMSOIL Synthetic Automatic and Manual
Transmission Fluids provide equally
superb cold-weather performance. AMSOIL
transmission fluids eliminate rough shifts and
sluggish performance in extreme cold.

Fuel Additives That Perform
Diesel applications can be
especially sensitive to cold-weather issues. As the
temperature drops, the wax naturally found in diesel
fuel begins to form crystals. The point at which wax
crystals form is known as the cloud point. These wax
crystals eventually clog the fuel filter and starve
the engine of fuel, preventing it from starting.
While low-quality fuels may form wax crystals in
temperatures as warm as
+4°C/40°F, most fuels have a
cloud point near
-0°C/32°F. The point at which the wax
crystals clog the fuel filter is known as the cold
filter-plugging point (CFPP).
AMSOIL Cold Flow Improver (ACF)
lowers the CFPP by as much as +1°C/34°F in ultra-low sulfur diesel fuel (ULSD). AMSOIL also offers
Diesel Concentrate Plus Cold Flow Improver
(DFC): a convenient combination of two fuel
additives in one bottle. Diesel Concentrate Plus
Cold Flow Improver delivers improved efficiency and
cold-temperature performance. While Cold Flow
Improver helps prevent diesel fuel from gelling in
cold temperatures,
AMSOIL Diesel Recovery (DRC) is an
emergency diesel fuel treatment that dissolves the
wax crystals that form when diesel fuel has
surpassed its cloud point in applications not
treated with Cold Flow Improver. Diesel Recovery
liquefies gelled diesel fuel and thaws frozen fuel
filters, avoiding costly towing charges and getting
diesels back on the road.

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