C3 Tech/Performance V8 Technical Info, Internal Engine, External Engine, Basic Tech and Maintenance for the C3 Corvette
Sponsored by:
Sponsored by:

Cobfree

Old Mar 6, 2010 | 08:43 AM
  #1  
Cobfree's Avatar
Cobfree
Thread Starter
Racer
15 Year Member
 
Joined: Feb 2010
Posts: 261
Likes: 0
From: St. Louis Missouri
Default Cobfree

My 1968 arrives today. I would like to first change the fluiids. Can anyone tell me the type and quantity of oil, filter and coolant?
Thanks
Reply
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 09:05 AM
  #2  
Mike Ward's Avatar
Mike Ward
Race Director
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 15,892
Likes: 42
Default

Big block? small block? Stock? Modified?
Reply
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 09:17 AM
  #3  
Cobfree's Avatar
Cobfree
Thread Starter
Racer
15 Year Member
 
Joined: Feb 2010
Posts: 261
Likes: 0
From: St. Louis Missouri
Default

What I know is 327CI/300HP and it is stock.
I assume it is a small block
Reply
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 09:23 AM
  #4  
7T1vette's Avatar
7T1vette
Team Owner
15 Year Member
Community Builder
Community Influencer
Top Answer: 5
 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 37,637
Likes: 3,118
From: Crossville TN
Default

You'll get as many opinions on this as there are grains of sand on the beach. But, if the engine is in good condition and not leaking oil, I would suggest that you use a full-synthetic oil (Mobil 1, Amsoil) in a 10W30 or 5W30 weight. Synthetic oil is SOOOO much better than organic oil (friction reducing, oil life, wear reduction, non-oxydizing....), it's just a "no brainer" for the average 'driver' collector car. Depending on the kind of miles you put on your car, you can extend oil changes to once per year or more. Just change the filter every 3 months and add the amount of lost synthetic oil.

Coolant should be a 50/50 mix of water and good quality antifreeze. Differential should be drained (suction, since there is no 'drain' plug...just a 'fill' plug) and filled with one full bottle of gear lube, one tube of GM Positraction additive, and topped off with part of another bottle of gear lube. Power steering uses...well....power steering fluid but can use auto tranny fluid if necessary (ATF); if present fluid is filled properly, still clear (not cloudy) and doesn't smell bad, just leave it alone. Same with brake fluid, if you don't have any calipers leaking. It wouldn't hurt to ask your seller what kind of brake fluid is in the car. Some folks have gone to some exotic type fluids that cannot be mixed with regular brake fluid. Check what is in the master cylinder (or have a good mechanic check it out) just to make sure you are putting in the same stuff. Manual trannys get transmission gear lube; auto trannys get ATF (DEXRON automatic tranny fluid). Ball joints and steering joints get water-resistant EP chassis lubricant...but I would again recommend synthetic joint grease for these. Do not use EP lubricant in the steering gear box, but rather use steering gear lube; however, synthetic high-temp gear grease is best for the steering box as it will last longer and not break down from engine/exhaust heat as quickly.
Reply
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 09:26 AM
  #5  
Cobfree's Avatar
Cobfree
Thread Starter
Racer
15 Year Member
 
Joined: Feb 2010
Posts: 261
Likes: 0
From: St. Louis Missouri
Default

Outstanding detail. many thanks
Reply
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 09:52 AM
  #6  
Mike Ward's Avatar
Mike Ward
Race Director
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 15,892
Likes: 42
Default

Unless you're going to take advantage of the extended oil change intervals, there are NO real world practical advantages to using a synthetic oil in an engine designed for conventional oils.

Stand by for the howls of protest and disagreement.

Your choice.
Reply
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 10:15 AM
  #7  
Cobfree's Avatar
Cobfree
Thread Starter
Racer
15 Year Member
 
Joined: Feb 2010
Posts: 261
Likes: 0
From: St. Louis Missouri
Default

Thank you for your suggestion
I am learning
Reply
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 10:25 AM
  #8  
Mako72's Avatar
Mako72
Melting Slicks
20 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
 
Joined: May 2004
Posts: 2,743
Likes: 846
From: Gulf of America
2023 C7 of the Year Finalist - Unmodified
2018 C3 of Year Finalist
Default

Cobfree, I see you are in St. Louis. You might check out these folks. Local C3 club for our area, nice folks.



http://www.stlc3sharks.com/messagebo...asp?FORUM_ID=6
Reply
Corvette Stories

The Best of Corvette for Corvette Enthusiasts

story-0

5 Best & 5 Most Overrated Corvette Track Packages of All Time!

 Joe Kucinski
story-1

Every 2027 Corvette Engine Explained

 Joe Kucinski
story-2

Designer Imagines A Corvette That Looks More Like a Corvette Than the Corvette

 Verdad Gallardo
story-3

10 Ugly Corvettes That We Still Kinda Love

 Joe Kucinski
story-4

Top 10 Most Expensive Corvettes Ever Sold on Bring A Trailer

 Brett Foote
story-5

10 Things Every Corvette Owner Needs (2026 Edition)

 Michael S. Palmer
story-6

8 Most "Only Corvette Owners Understand" Quirks and Problems

 Pouria Savadkouei
story-7

10 Reasons the C6 Z06 is Still A Performance Benchmark After 20 Years

 Joe Kucinski
story-8

How Much Horsepower Every Corvette Engine "LOST" in 1972

 Joe Kucinski
story-9

Top 10 DOs and DON'Ts for Protecting Your Convertible Top!

 Michael S. Palmer
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 10:34 AM
  #9  
Cobfree's Avatar
Cobfree
Thread Starter
Racer
15 Year Member
 
Joined: Feb 2010
Posts: 261
Likes: 0
From: St. Louis Missouri
Default

Thanks I will. I did join the Corvette Club. Nice folks
Reply
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 12:28 PM
  #10  
7T1vette's Avatar
7T1vette
Team Owner
15 Year Member
Community Builder
Community Influencer
Top Answer: 5
 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 37,637
Likes: 3,118
From: Crossville TN
Default

Read all the literature you want on the benefits of synthetic oils. M. Ward is way off base on this one. Every auto manufacturer, every municipal vehicle maintenance system, every trucking system all know the advantages of synthetic oil for internal combustion engines. Most mfgrs. of new vehicles include them in new builds; the ones that don't just want to save a few bucks. The benefits to engine life...bearings, rings, etc....is nothing short of amazing when compared to even the best organic oils. Read up on it for yourself and make your own decision.
Reply
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 12:46 PM
  #11  
Alan 71's Avatar
Alan 71
Team Owner
15 Year Member
Active Streak: 120 Days
Community Influencer
Top Answer: 5
 
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 31,301
Likes: 4,389
From: Westminster Maryland
Default

Hi CF,
WELL?????
Is it there yet?????
I'm waiting patiently for the first pictures. Were you able to sleep last night?
Good Luck!
Regards,
Alan
Reply
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 06:27 PM
  #12  
Mike Ward's Avatar
Mike Ward
Race Director
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 15,892
Likes: 42
Default

Originally Posted by 7T1vette
Read all the literature you want on the benefits of synthetic oils. M. Ward is way off base on this one. Every auto manufacturer, every municipal vehicle maintenance system, every trucking system all know the advantages of synthetic oil for internal combustion engines. Most mfgrs. of new vehicles include them in new builds; the ones that don't just want to save a few bucks. The benefits to engine life...bearings, rings, etc....is nothing short of amazing when compared to even the best organic oils. Read up on it for yourself and make your own decision.
Here we go. I'm not going to get into an argument- put up first handed proof or let it go. I have 31 years in the engine manufacturing business that gave me all the proof I need. Yes, many commercial or industrial outfits use it for the extended change interval, no other reason. Believe what you want.

BTW- my daily driver is a recent model Jaguar with a 4.2 L V8, no synthetic required or even recommended. Factory fill is good old Castrol dino oil and the change interval is 10,0000 miles. Jag is not known to be 'cheap' on anything.
Reply
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 06:52 PM
  #13  
7T1vette's Avatar
7T1vette
Team Owner
15 Year Member
Community Builder
Community Influencer
Top Answer: 5
 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 37,637
Likes: 3,118
From: Crossville TN
Default

That's great, Mike. We're happy for you. But you're out of touch with modern oil technology. For every technical paper you can find that says "organic oil is just as good as synthetic oil", I can come up with 100 or more that say it is considerably better. [Makes you wonder who funded the papers supporting dino oil. ]

I just think you are doing the general Forum group a real disservice by telling them NOT to consider synthetic oil. I have no problem with you or anyone else using organic oil, if that is your choice. But why try to convince others to 'live in the past'?
Reply
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 07:10 PM
  #14  
jordan89's Avatar
jordan89
Safety Car
15 Year Member
Conversation Starter
All Eyes On Me
 
Joined: Mar 2009
Posts: 3,558
Likes: 4
From: Oakland California
Default

I go with synthetics in all my cars.
Reply
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 07:11 PM
  #15  
jordan89's Avatar
jordan89
Safety Car
15 Year Member
Conversation Starter
All Eyes On Me
 
Joined: Mar 2009
Posts: 3,558
Likes: 4
From: Oakland California
Default

Reply
Old Mar 6, 2010 | 07:29 PM
  #16  
Mike Ward's Avatar
Mike Ward
Race Director
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 15,892
Likes: 42
Default

Originally Posted by 7T1vette
I just think you are doing the general Forum group a real disservice by telling them NOT to consider synthetic oil. I have no problem with you or anyone else using organic oil, if that is your choice. But why try to convince others to 'live in the past'?
I'm offering a different viewpoint than yours- nothing more or less. I presume the average adult (including the OP) is smart enough to do ask questions, evaluate the answers and make up his own mind as to what he wants to do. More importantly, I did not tell anyone NOT to consider synthetic oil simply that the extended change interval was the only tangible benefit. Big difference.

If synthetic oils were universally proven and accepted to be superior in every possible application there would be thousands of independent unbiased, real life case studies documenting this. There aren't, aside from the typical sponsored lab and marketing stuff that proves whatever point the manufacturer wants them to prove. I can point you to studies that show NO difference in long term use across a fleet of vehicles, aside from the aforementioned extended change interval.

I retired from the engine business only last April- the engine oil business has not changed since them, so I'm not 'out of date'.

What direct, first handed experience can you share?

Last edited by Mike Ward; Mar 6, 2010 at 07:34 PM.
Reply
Old Mar 7, 2010 | 12:05 AM
  #17  
7T1vette's Avatar
7T1vette
Team Owner
15 Year Member
Community Builder
Community Influencer
Top Answer: 5
 
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 37,637
Likes: 3,118
From: Crossville TN
Default

Well, with 40 years experience in the heavy-duty truck and military automatic transmission business, I can tell you that our development test folks are simply 'giddy' about the durability benefits imparted to those trannies by synthetic fluids....from heavy-duty pickup truck trannies to military tank units.

And the reason you can't find those studies is because they are considered proprietary information by the businesses who spent their employees time and their money to run the tests. Why should they provide that info to the general public? But....I will be glad to search the 'web' [for about 10 minutes] and report back on any technical papers espousing the benefits of synthetic oil in operating machinery.

OK, the 10 minutes is up and here are the first three results:

http://www.firstfives.org/faq/oil/oilartcl.html

http://www.carcraft.com/techarticles...oil/index.html

http://www.amsoil.com/products/stree...hitePaper.aspx


For the last write-up, you should download the PDF "white paper" on oil tests in motorcycle engines. It is interesting to note that most of the 'candidates' for this study were synthetic oils, as very few manufacturers recommend non-synthetic oils for racing use. Particularly note the "Wear Resistance" testing results.
Reply

Get notified of new replies

To Cobfree

Old Mar 7, 2010 | 09:28 AM
  #18  
C66 Racing's Avatar
C66 Racing
Premium Supporting Vendor
20 Year Member
Conversation Starter
All Eyes On Me
Top Answer: 1
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 5,364
Likes: 38
From: King George VA
Default

Cobfree,
Congrats on your new car! Not trying to start an oil debate on your thread, just passing an offer your way so that you are aware of it. If you do decide to try the AMSOIL fluids mentioned above, please drop me a PM or email so I can get you dealer wholesale pricing, about 25% below retail via the AMSOIL Preferred Customer Program.
__________________


C66 Racing #66 NASA ST2, SCCA T2
AMSOIL Dealer (Forum Vendor)
AMSOIL Preferred Customer Program (Members buy at Wholesale - a savings of about 25%)





Reply
Old Mar 7, 2010 | 09:50 AM
  #19  
Golden's Avatar
Golden
Pro
 
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 593
Likes: 0
From: London England
Default

I have to say I'm (rather unusually) with Mike on this one.

Synthetic oil's two biggest advantages are it's ability in extreme heat and extended service intervals.

On a stock car that is not used every day (as so many C3's are) it makes far more sense to do more regular oil changes with a cheaper oil.

Lets not forget that as well as lubricating the engine, the oil also holds in suspension many chemicals and particulates which we could remove by a simple oil change.

I'm not anti synthetic, it's a fantastic development in oil technology. It's a must in a highly tuned motor or a daily driver doing proper mileage, what it's not is the 'only' option.
Reply
Old Mar 7, 2010 | 11:11 AM
  #20  
CheezMoe's Avatar
CheezMoe
Melting Slicks
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 3,456
Likes: 102
From: Piedmont Va
St. Jude Donor '11-'12-'13,'19-'20
Default

Wait!.... this debate is still in it's infancy! The ZDDP factor has not been thrown in yet!


To the OP; Read this thread:

http://forums.corvetteforum.com/c3-t...ppet-oils.html
Reply

Thread Tools
Search this Thread

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:24 PM.

story-0
5 Best & 5 Most Overrated Corvette Track Packages of All Time!

Slideshow: The 5 best and 5 most overrated Corvette track packages ever.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-06-09 12:46:45


VIEW MORE
story-1
Every 2027 Corvette Engine Explained

Slideshow: Every 2027 Corvette engine explained

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-06-09 12:16:31


VIEW MORE
story-2
Designer Imagines A Corvette That Looks More Like a Corvette Than the Corvette

Slideshow: A Jaguar designer's personal project imagines what a modern front-engined Corvette might look like if Chevrolet revisited the golden age of the Stingray.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-06-08 19:53:43


VIEW MORE
story-3
10 Ugly Corvettes That We Still Kinda Love

Slideshow: 10 ugly Corvettes that we still kinda love.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-06-03 10:34:17


VIEW MORE
story-4
Top 10 Most Expensive Corvettes Ever Sold on Bring A Trailer

A lot of money has changed hands at the online auction house over the years.

By Brett Foote | 2026-06-03 10:21:50


VIEW MORE
story-5
10 Things Every Corvette Owner Needs (2026 Edition)

Slideshow: 10 great gifts Corvette enthusiasts actually want for Father's Day!

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-06-03 15:43:40


VIEW MORE
story-6
8 Most "Only Corvette Owners Understand" Quirks and Problems

Slideshow: These are the quirks, annoyances, and oddly lovable problems that every Corvette owner eventually learns to live with.

By Pouria Savadkouei | 2026-05-28 09:31:39


VIEW MORE
story-7
10 Reasons the C6 Z06 is Still A Performance Benchmark After 20 Years

Slideshow: 10 reasons why the C6 Z06 is still a performance benchmark after 20 years.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-27 17:20:09


VIEW MORE
story-8
How Much Horsepower Every Corvette Engine "LOST" in 1972

Slideshow: How much horsepower every Corvette engine lost in 1972.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-27 16:54:53


VIEW MORE
story-9
Top 10 DOs and DON'Ts for Protecting Your Convertible Top!

Slideshow: How to Protect A Convertible Top: 10 DOs & DON'Ts

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-04-03 00:00:00


VIEW MORE