Re: 1941 Packard 110 - Fluid Change Intervals
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Home away from home
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In the old days gear oils would thicken greatly with use which is why they said to change them in the fall so that they weren't like margarine by the time February rolled around. Occasionally I will get in something that has been inactive since the seventies or so and the gear lubes will come out like tar.
The modern oils don't do that and seem to hold their viscosity pretty much indefinitely. At this point I am doing something on the order of 40,000 miles or ten years on my cars. These gearboxes and axles are all broken in and not shedding metal unless they are already on the edge of failure.
Posted on: 2016/9/29 6:53
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Re: 1941 Packard 110 - Fluid Change Intervals
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Forum Ambassador
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I've used SAE85W-140 extreme pressure gear oil in pre- and postwar differentials for decades. I typically change it every 7-10 years which probably equates to 10,000 miles or so and I suspect even that change interval is overly conservative but I'm just guided by the fact that fresh clean lubricant is inexpensive.
Posted on: 2016/9/29 9:28
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Re: 1941 Packard 110 - Fluid Change Intervals
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Home away from home
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Thanks, good to know!
Posted on: 2016/10/10 14:16
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