Trans and diff fluid question.
Hello,
I see on the forums here that the red line full synthetic 75w90 hypoid oil recommended for the diff. It also looks like others are recommending this for the 6 speed manual transmission as well? Or am I reading this wrong.
Doing some research Pennzoil platinum and ultra Platinum oils are made from group 4 and group 5 synthetic base oils vs most full synthetic are based on varying amounts of group 3 base oils.
As long as the oil is 75w90 and contains friction modifiers for the diff I intend to use the Pennzoil.
However here is my question. I see that most hypoid limited slip diff oils specifically state DO NOT USE in syncromesh transmission??? Yet it appears in certain threads the redline oil is recommended for both?
I see on the forums here that the red line full synthetic 75w90 hypoid oil recommended for the diff. It also looks like others are recommending this for the 6 speed manual transmission as well? Or am I reading this wrong.
Doing some research Pennzoil platinum and ultra Platinum oils are made from group 4 and group 5 synthetic base oils vs most full synthetic are based on varying amounts of group 3 base oils.
As long as the oil is 75w90 and contains friction modifiers for the diff I intend to use the Pennzoil.
However here is my question. I see that most hypoid limited slip diff oils specifically state DO NOT USE in syncromesh transmission??? Yet it appears in certain threads the redline oil is recommended for both?
Yes I think my issue and what was confusing me, I confused two different red line oils. I thought that they were recommending the same for both. But redline actually recommended their gl-4 75w90 "mt-90" for the manual. And their 75w90 gl-5 or redline 75w90 gear oil. Two very different red line oils... Which I had confused as the same.
So I am considering using the Pennzoil synthetic 75w90 gl-5 full synthetic in the diff. And Mannol 75w80 mtf-4 in the trans as it meets MB 235.10 specs. Both which are quite inexpensive yet the quality is very high.
So I am considering using the Pennzoil synthetic 75w90 gl-5 full synthetic in the diff. And Mannol 75w80 mtf-4 in the trans as it meets MB 235.10 specs. Both which are quite inexpensive yet the quality is very high.
Last edited by Tommyb13662; Aug 8, 2024 at 03:55 PM. Reason: Typo
Yes I think my issue and what was confusing me, I confused two different red line oils. I thought that they were recommending the same for both. But redline actually recommended their gl-4 75w90 "mt-90" for the manual. And their 75w90 gl-5 or redline 75w90 gear oil. Two very different red line oils... Which I had confused as the same.
So I am considering using the Pennzoil synthetic 75w90 gl-5 full synthetic in the diff. And Mannol 75w80 mtf-4 in the trans as it meets MB 235.10 specs. Both which are quite inexpensive yet the quality is very high.
So I am considering using the Pennzoil synthetic 75w90 gl-5 full synthetic in the diff. And Mannol 75w80 mtf-4 in the trans as it meets MB 235.10 specs. Both which are quite inexpensive yet the quality is very high.
For the differential I used Redline 75W85. When I did the 6 speed transmission I used Mercedes-Benz Gear Oil MB 235.10.
Do not drain diff or tranny until you can break loose the fill plugs. I replaced the 6spd oil with Pennzoil® Synchromesh, seemed like it helped a little with 1st to 2nd gear shifting
According to what I read the gl-5 fluids are a NO-NO for syncromesh. There are soft metals in the syncromesh that the aggressive friction modifiers in gl-5 can corrode and damage. Yet the gl-4 syncromesh fluids do not provide the superior shear protection that a gl-5 for our limited slip diff oil provides.
That's why I was so confused when I thought people were using the same in both. It appears that any full synthetic gl-4 fluid is good for the 6 speed manual. And any FULL SYNTHETIC GL-5 for our limited slip diff.
Those two specs as long as full synthetic should properly lube and take care of our cars. In a pinch oil is better than no oil... Just make sure you put the proper fluids in soon.
That's why I was so confused when I thought people were using the same in both. It appears that any full synthetic gl-4 fluid is good for the 6 speed manual. And any FULL SYNTHETIC GL-5 for our limited slip diff.
Those two specs as long as full synthetic should properly lube and take care of our cars. In a pinch oil is better than no oil... Just make sure you put the proper fluids in soon.
According to what I read the gl-5 fluids are a NO-NO for syncromesh. There are soft metals in the syncromesh that the aggressive friction modifiers in gl-5 can corrode and damage. Yet the gl-4 syncromesh fluids do not provide the superior shear protection that a gl-5 for our limited slip diff oil provides.
That's why I was so confused when I thought people were using the same in both. It appears that any full synthetic gl-4 fluid is good for the 6 speed manual. And any FULL SYNTHETIC GL-5 for our limited slip diff.
Those two specs as long as full synthetic should properly lube and take care of our cars. In a pinch oil is better than no oil... Just make sure you put the proper fluids in soon.
That's why I was so confused when I thought people were using the same in both. It appears that any full synthetic gl-4 fluid is good for the 6 speed manual. And any FULL SYNTHETIC GL-5 for our limited slip diff.
Those two specs as long as full synthetic should properly lube and take care of our cars. In a pinch oil is better than no oil... Just make sure you put the proper fluids in soon.
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