I frankly don't think it's silly to notice the sound of your engine changed when you switched lubricants. Like was stated earlier, if I had never used the dino to break it in, I wouldn't have noticed anything. But after switching and finding the engine noisier, I brought it up. And most of you agree that the engine is noisier. Why, if the viscosity is the same, would synthetic be "thinner", and make an engine noisier? This was my concern and reason for the thread, not to be "just plain silly".
Ya'll bring up some good points. Noise to me indicates the start of problems, so I try to pay careful attention to all the different sounds of my bike. I actually enjoy listening to all the different sounds. So when it got noisier, I took notice. It sounds like you're saying the engine noise is a product of it's environment, and that includes the oil . Different properties, different sound. If that's the case, and the synthetic is thinner, wouldn't then engine build tolerances be different for the different properties of the oil film that provides the lubrication?
I'm trying to learn something about this here, not be silly. Had never given it a thought til I heard it myself. Want to know for sure it works better, not go by the hype. You guys provided some good facts to support it. But if your engine operates at proper temps, you shouldn't have to worry about it breaking down. And we're talking modern dino oil here with all the necessary additives, not running crude thru it.
I use M1 V-Twin because S&S has recommended it in their new motors. But I'm sure Mobil pays em a pretty penny to endorse 1 brand of oil. Now I've got something to think about. Some of you made a compelling argument. Great stuff gang!

Hoist!
