..in my owner manual it says even 20w50 is recommended, if the engine is " raced" or under heavy conditions...
only the 20 W makes me a little confused... thatoil would be like honey...if the temp is below 40 deg or so...
Greetings Jurgen
Jurgen, the manual was written 40-50 years ago and a couple things are probably different today,
First, the quality of engine assembly was far less precise in general than it is today. Engines often had looser clearances and the crankshaft/crank saddles may have not been as straight as today.
Second, the quality of the oil was not nearly as good as it is today, and oil could, and did, lose its viscosity with age when it got hot. It was not uncommon at all for heavier oils to be suggested for high performance use.
Today's oils last much longer and their characteristics are much more stable. It is very rare today to need 20w-50 oil in a street car, or any other, for that matter.
Typically, if the engine, after being run hard, still shows close to to the old 10 psi per thousand rpm rule at peak rpm, it is heavy enough. Many pure race engines run less than that. Low rpm oil pressure is usually not sensitive because there is no real load on the engine parts at idle, or cruise.
A 20w oil flows like a 20 weight oil at -10 C. At colder temps than the rated temp, a quality synthetic oil will flow better than a conventional oil does below its rated temp. If you live up north where it gets really cold, then a synthetic oil will flow much better at -30 or -40 C than will an equivalently rated conventional oil.
Synthetic oils are not all equal. A good synthetic oil will be listed as a Group IV oil and it needs very little viscosity improvers compared to cheaper synthetics like most Mobil 1's which are now Group III's with a few exceptions. Group IV synthetics cost more.
Running a heavier oils can actually cause more engine wear because it takes much more effort to push the oil thru the engine and they take more hp to do it. Add a hv oil pump and it gets much worse because one is trying to push a greater volume of oil thru the same clearances which raises oil pressure while increasing the effort to do so.
That's the reason it is suggested to use a stronger oil pump drive rod when using an hv pump....so it won't shear off. Now if the engine was built with very loose clearances, it may take an hv pump to get the desired oil pressure.
In your case, if you are turning 6000 rpm max, I would run the lightest oil possible that will still give you 60 psi at 6000 rpm on a hot day when the engine is fully hot. That might mean you run a lighter oil in the winter and a heavier oil in the summer....if you have a big temp variation seasonally.