The problem is not that these oils are synthetic. It's their viscosity.Many last century Porsche engines that require relatively thick oils with high film strength have been destroyed by "modern" mechanics and DIYers who assume thin synthetics are better than the oils Porsche specified at the time.
There are two reasons why we will see more and more thin oils with low viscosity (the viscosity is directly linked to the capability to face pressure from surfaces).
For the sake of reducing CO2 output of ICE's the engineers need to reduce internal friction resistance. Oil is part of the resistance. Higher viscosity means more friction. By using low viscosity oils, like 0W-10, friction is reduced. Low viscosity oils in combination with low performance oil pumps become more and more difficult to keep oil pressure up. The BMW engines in the IG use an electronically controlled oil pump. I have no experience with this, I don't know if that is good or bad in the end....but I know that the vane pump type in our Ford Puma engine is totally crap. I still prefer the classic gear pump. Check the aftermarket....there are more and more powerful aftermarket oil pumps availabe for a quite large range of engines which faced weak lubrication based damages.
The second reason for more thinner oils is that the manufacturing got more precise and very small and equal gaps are possible. On one hand, that gives more power, as you have less blow by gases, on the other hand, you must increase the throughput of oil, to get the heat away from the surfaces at the small gaps.
Welcome to the future.
However, for old engines or engines which run quite a lot of kilometers I would change to the oil in the specs with the highest viscosity. My Td5 engine with 465.000 km got 5W-30 for a long time. I changed to 5W-40 for some time now. That will compensate for a certain amount of wear. The upper value is the important one, you should stay with what the OEM allows. The upper value reduces over time as it is based on additives. The lower value represents the viscosity of the base oil used. As additives disappear over time and use the upper value get's lower and the oil becomes thinner, thereby it looses its capabilty to face pressure. Contamination with other fluids and solids may work against getting thinner, but the dilution has other drawbacks. And still, the capability to face pressure gets lost more and more.
Fun Fact: The original Mini shares its oil between engine and gearbox. It used to have a high viscosity oil xW-50 if I remember correctly. that is because the shear forces in the gearbox made it aging very fast loosing its viscosity quickly. The oil change intervall was about 4,000 to 5,000 km.
So be happy with modern life time oils which can be used for 60 trillion kilometers...without any drawback...
AWo
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