Z4M S54 oil?

10w-60 is the correct grade.

OE BMW is Castrol Edge Supercar.

Personally whilst I have always stuck with this up to now, my next change will be to a more modern fully synth in the same grade - my view being that oil tech has moved on substantially since the s54 was first launched, and there are more modern oils which can offer better protection when cold and better resilience to extreme heat from track use etc.

Something like Motul 300V or Millers CFS 10w 60 is what I'll be planning to use next.
 
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I kind of look it the other way with these newer oils. They may have 'better' empirical properties than the Castrol, however the engine was designed and tested with that particular oil.
Anecdotal perhaps, but I have read of the millers nanodrive stuff, that is no doubt a good oil, eating people's s54 cams.
The few 'teams' I know racing s54s swear by castrol too.
If it ain't broke, don't fix it and all that imo...
 
The only oil I would consider changing to is Fuchs Titan Race Pro S 10W-60
Not heard a bad word about it as yet. Otherwise Castrol has been fine for me so far.
 
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Been using Shell Helix Ultra Racing for over 50k miles now approaching 110k miles and it ain't blown up yet.
 
I've only ever run mine on Castrol Edge Supercar 10W-60 and it is still going strong just short of 99K miles.
 
I kind of look it the other way with these newer oils. They may have 'better' empirical properties than the Castrol, however the engine was designed and tested with that particular oil.
Anecdotal perhaps, but I have read of the millers nanodrive stuff, that is no doubt a good oil, eating people's s54 cams.
The few 'teams' I know racing s54s swear by castrol too.
If it ain't broke, don't fix it and all that imo...
My cams ate themselves at about 70k anyway, and it was run on castrol all the way up to then!

I somewhat agree with your points though, hence why I've still not switched over... I spoke at some length to Mr Vanos a few years back and he recommended running fuchs titan or pro race 10w50 would be better but again it's all opinion rather than fact which I struggle with!
 
Mine was run 10w60 Edge (for M Engines or Supercar), from when I bought it 9000 miles, and all 140,000 miles since it had the BMW AUC engine replacement at 20,000 miles…but it’s never been in there more than about 6000 miles.

Bearings needed doing at that mileage though…although I went for a replacement, low mileage replacement engine instead.
 
The only oil I would consider changing to is Fuchs Titan Race Pro S 10W-60
Not heard a bad word about it as yet. Otherwise Castrol has been fine for me so far.
I used this on the last change, and also run it in my mainly track used Clio 172 Cup. Is very highly regarded - it is a full ester based oil.
 
For my Z4 M Roadster, I use Liqui Moly Synthoil Race Tech GT1 SAE 10W-60 .. made in Germany.

 
I use Liqui Moly 10w60 in summer and redline 5w50 in winter.

I believe OEM oil from BMW is now made by shell. Not sure if this is global or not.
 
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BMW swapped to Shell several years ago. My Indy said it was because Castrol wouldn't supply theirs in containers that didn't have the Castrol logo on them, although I've no idea if that was the case.
 
The redline 5w50 is a great oil for those of us that do some spirited runs and no track work. It is pretty think at 100c at about 21 ish vs 24 is for 10w60 but much thinner at startup for quick flow and shorter runs. Warms up faster also and has HTS numbers. Better than most 10w60 oils. But it's not the holy grail castrol so make up your own mind.
 
BMW swapped to Shell several years ago. My Indy said it was because Castrol wouldn't supply theirs in containers that didn't have the Castrol logo on them, although I've no idea if that was the case.
All about price I expect, 10w60 is 10w60 mostly otherwise there would be no 10w60 standard. Castrol is not magic fluid.
 
BMW swapped to Shell several years ago. My Indy said it was because Castrol wouldn't supply theirs in containers that didn't have the Castrol logo on them, although I've no idea if that was the case.
BMW oil is Castrol in North America and Shell in Europe. It's all just contractual and marketing stuff.
 
The redline 5w50 is a great oil for those of us that do some spirited runs and no track work. It is pretty think at 100c at about 21 ish vs 24 is for 10w60 but much thinner at startup for quick flow and shorter runs. Warms up faster also and has HTS numbers. Better than most 10w60 oils. But it's not the holy grail castrol so make up your own mind.
I'd be concerned running a 50 weight oil with the reputation for bearing wear the S54 engine has - you need the heavier weight when hot as otherwise you don't get the film strength.
 
It's not just any 50w. Take a look below. It's much thinner at startup and very close at 100c to the 10w60 spec. In addition it's high temp sheer specs are much better that most 10w60. My car is never tracker but it does get started at 0 degrees Celsius for short trips in winter. The redline is just better for that. Depending on how you measure it flows about 20% bette4

Chatgpt.

Good question — the SAE J300 standard defines the viscosity limits for engine oils to carry a certain grade like 10W-60. It actually has two sets of requirements:


  1. “W” grade (cold performance)
    This is about low-temperature cranking and pumping.
    • For 10W:
      • CCS (Cold Cranking Simulator) at –25 °C: max 7000 mPa·s
      • MRV (Mini-Rotary Viscometer) at –30 °C: max 60,000 mPa·s, and yield stress ≤ 35,000 Pa
      • Kinematic viscosity at 100 °C: ≥ 4.1 mm²/s
  2. “60” grade (hot performance)
    This is about viscosity at operating temperatures.
    • Kinematic viscosity at 100 °C: 21.9 to < 26.1 mm²/s
    • HTHS (High-Temperature High-Shear at 150 °C): ≥ 3.7 mPa·s





📌 So for an oil to be called 10W-60, it must:


  • Stay thin enough to crank/pump at –25/–30 °C (≤ 7000 / ≤ 60,000 mPa·s).
  • Have a kinematic viscosity at 100 °C between 21.9–26.1 mm²/s.
  • Have HTHS viscosity at 150 °C of ≥ 3.7 mPa·s.
Here are the published “typical properties” / specs for Red Line 5W-50 synthetic motor oil:
PropertyValue / Spec
SAE Viscosity Grade5W-50 Red Line Oil+2Southern Counties Lubricants+2
Viscosity @ 100 °C (cSt)21.0 Truck Stuff+3Southern Counties Lubricants+3Red Line Oil+3
Viscosity @ 40 °C (cSt)130 Southern Counties Lubricants+2Red Line Oil+2
Viscosity Index186 Red Line Oil+2Southern Counties Lubricants+2
CCS Viscosity (Poise) @ –30 °C60 Poise Southern Counties Lubricants+1
HTHS Viscosity @ 150 °C5.0 cP (ASTM D4741) Southern Counties Lubricants+1
Pour Point–45 °C (–49 °F) Red Line Oil+2Red Line Oil+2
NOACK Evaporation Loss (1h @ 250 °C)6 % Southern Counties Lubricants+2Red Line Oil+2
API Service ClassSN / SM / SL / CF Red Line Oil+2Southern Counties Lubricants+2
ACEA Service ClassA3 / B3 / B4 Red Line Oil+2Southern Counties Lubricants+2


Here are the specs for the supposed holy grail.

Castrol TWS 10W-60 — Typical / Spec‐Values​

PropertyValue
Density @ 15 °C (relative)~ 0.853 g/mL Scribd+3Scribd+3brrperformance.com+3
Viscosity (kinematic) @ 100 °C~ 22.7 mm²/s Scribd+3Scribd+3doczz.net+3
Viscosity (kinematic) @ 40 °C~ 160 mm²/s Scribd+3Scribd+3doczz.net+3
Cold Crank‐Simulator Viscosity (CCS) @ ‐25 °C~ 4,879 mPa·s (cP) Scribd+2doczz.net+2
Viscosity Index (VI)~ 173 Scribd+1
Pour Point~ −39 °C Scribd+1
Flash Point (PMCC)>200 °C (some sources say ~-“~200 / ~203 °C”) Scribd+2Demon Tweeks Merchandising+2
Sulfated Ash~ 1.29 % wt Scribd+2Scribd+2
Spec / Approvals / Performance ClaimsSAE 10W-60; ACEA A3/B3, A3/B4; API SN/CF; Exclusive approval for BMW M-Models; meets VW 505.00 / 501.01 in some markets. Scribd+2doczz.net+2

This is chatgpts best effort at a plot down to 0 degrees C but it says it's only a model. You can see the redline flows better during warm up and is pretty close at temp. My car will never be at sustained high rpm just a few pulls. The redline also stays in viscosity at high temp much better than most 10w60 according
 

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The redline also stays in viscosity at high temp much better than most 10w60 according
Just a note for the following post, that whilst I know a lot of posters are basing this on relatively mild UK winters, I think @Sajk is in the USA, so very cold winters may be a normal part of life, so requirements will differ. I've only ever been below -30ºc when skiing in Canada (Jasper / Banff where we saw -35ºc and everyone had engine heaters plugged in if the cars had to be parked outside).



Doesn't all that ChatGPT summary just say (in a lot more words) that the overall differences are the expected variances between the two grades? Which normally would mean (not brand specific)...
  • 10w60 is slightly thicker at freezing temps (<0ºc) than a 5w50
  • 10w60 is slightly thicker at warmer temps (40ºc) than a 5w50
  • 10w60 is slightly thicker at hotter temps (>100ºc) than a 5w50
Correct me if I'm wrong but I thought a lower number of millipascals/second in the CCS (cold crank simulator) means a lower amount of pressure was required to pump the oil? If that is the case then the Redline 5w50 is 60p (poise) or 6000mPa/s at -30ºc, and so the 10w60 Castrol (4879mPa/s or 49 poise) seems to be easier to pump around the engine in normal UK winters than the Redline 5w50 (albeit the Castrol is simulated at -25ºc, and I don't know whether there's a direct scaling to work out what it would be at -30ºc).

But oils can/do spread within the range a bit, but as long as the oil meets the API/ACEA spec, then they can claim that grade/spec. It's like the DOT rating on brake fluid...some of the DOT4 fluids perform as well as the DOT5 fluid, but they've never paid for it to be retested/recertified, so can only advertise it as a DOT4...but that also means that they could reduce the performance a little in the future and still be within the DOT4 specs.

To complete the comparison, the Castrol 10w60 HTHS at 150ºc is 5.2.

For comparison, here are the specs for another common well-know oil, Mobil 1 10w60:
  • Density @ 15ºc = 0.855
  • Viscosity @ 100ºc = 22.7
  • Viscosity @ 40ºc = 152.7
  • Viscosity @ 150ºc = 5.7
  • MRV @ -30ºc - 14751 (cannot be directly converted to CCS)
 
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Here are the specs for the supposed holy grail.

Why do you hate Castrol so much? :LOL:

Regardless of all the ChatGPT guff, it's the only one that is 'long term' tested, I don't think anyone's saying it's a holy grail.
Some people thought Millers was ok to use until there seemed to be a pattern of it chewing through cam followers.
As mentioned, if it ain't broke......
 
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