What’s the Best Motorcycle Oil?

We think AMSOIL Synthetic Motorcycle Oil is the best available, and here's the testing to demonstrate its excellent performance.

July 29, 2021

Nothing starts a social-media firestorm like sharing your opinions on politics, religion or the best motorcycle oil.

It seems like most riders are loyal to an oil brand, and insinuating your brand is better is tantamount to calling someone out for a street fight. Call me a glutton for punishment because in this post I’m going to attempt to convince you that AMSOIL makes the best motorcycle oil.

First, an important word: If you’re happy with your current motorcycle oil, wonderful – keep using it.

This post is for the rider who hasn’t settled on an oil brand. It’s for the rider who feels a little anxious about engine protection when he or she pushes the limits a little too far. For example, when the temperature gauge creeps up on a blistering summer day as you’re crawling down Main Street at Sturgis with no airflow across the engine. Or when you’re ascending a steep hill as the sun beats down and radiates heat off the asphalt.

I hope to convince you that AMSOIL Synthetic Motorcycle Oil is the best choice for delivering the added protection that’ll put your mind at ease.

First, we need to identify precisely what a motorcycle oil must do before deciding if it’s the best at doing it.

The best motorcycle oil must protect against heat.

Protect against extreme heat

Motorcycles can get hot, especially powerful air-cooled V-twins, which you’ll find on most Harleys. They use airflow across the engine to dissipate heat. Air is inherently less efficient at removing heat than water/engine coolant. Even in a water-cooled bike, like a modern Indian, oil temperature can still get plenty hot even if water temperature holds steady.

If the engine gets too hot, the oil’s viscosity can decrease (become thinner). This reduces wear protection, putting the engine at risk of piston scuffing or bearing wear.

In extreme cases, the bike’s computer will trigger a warning light and shut down the engine until it’s cooled off.

Extreme heat also speeds the chemical reaction process, called oxidation, that causes oil to break down and lose its protective properties. Oil that has oxidized becomes thicker, which reduces wear protection and energy efficiency, requiring frequent oil changes.

Motorcycles riding down the highway.

Protect against high-rpm stress

The average motorcycle runs at much higher rpm than your car or truck. A metric sport bike can easily eclipse 10,000 rpm, and some even push 20,000. In addition, they have much higher power density than a typical automobile engine. Their compression ratio can also be higher.

While that adds up to exhilarating speed and massive grins inside your helmet, it places enormous stress on the bearings, pistons, cam lobes and other components. The intense heat combined with extreme friction can lead to metal-to-metal contact and catastrophic wear if the oil can’t handle it.

V-Twin motorcycle engine

Prevent oil shear

Most motorcycle oils must be multi-functional, meaning they have to protect the transmission and primary in addition to the engine.

Protecting the transmission is especially problematic given the intense shearing forces the meshing gear teeth create. The extreme pressure the oil bears as it’s squeezed between the gears can shear the oil molecules, leading to viscosity loss. As noted earlier, oil that loses viscosity can fail to provide the required level of protection.

(Find out how to change transmission fluid and primary fluid on a Harley.)

The best motorcycle oil must also prevent corrosion

If that’s not enough, your motorcycle oil also has to prevent rust and corrosion from forming on engine parts during storage.

Many riders live in climates that require them to store their bikes for part of the year. While it’s sitting in the garage (or living room, if you’re like a neighbor I once had), changes in ambient temperature and humidity can create condensation that causes rust to form.

When you start the bike in the spring, the rust can flake off and contaminate the oil. Prior to lodging in the filter, it can circulate and scour the bearings and other metal components like sandpaper, creating damaging wear.

Now that we’ve adequately defined the challenge, let’s look at the solution.

AMSOIL Synthetic Motorcycle Oil is formulated with durable, heat-resistant synthetic base oils. It naturally resists viscosity loss due to elevated heat and shearing forces better than other oils. In fact, AMSOIL 20W-50 Synthetic V-Twin Motorcycle Oil resists viscosity breakdown 6X better that Harley-Davidson SYN3¹ for improved protection against compensator and transmission gear wear.

AMSOIL Motorcycle Oil outperforms Harley-Davidson SYN3 oil.

It’s also formulated with potent detergent additives that fight deposits and help keep engine parts clean. This translates into maximum compression, power and engine life.

To demonstrate its protection, we installed AMSOIL 20W-50 Synthetic V-Twin Motorcycle Oil in a Harley Street Bob with a Milwaukee-Eight 107 engine for a 1,000-mile extreme-heat dyno test. The test was designed to replicate slow-moving operation in extreme heat with little-to-no cooling air passing over the engine.

The test created severe conditions that included…

  • 300°F (149°C) oil temperature
  • 420°F (216°) rear-cylinder temperature

That’s much hotter than your bike should ever get. How did AMSOIL perform? Check out the video for the results.

What’s the best motorcycle oil?

Based on its performance in industry standard testing and its performance in a 1,000-mile extreme-heat dyno test, we think AMSOIL Synthetic Motorcycle Oil is the best motorcycle oil available. It protects powerful, hot-running motorcycle engines in the toughest conditions, giving you peace of mind your bike is protected no matter how hard you ride.

¹Based on testing of AMSOIL 20W-50 Synthetic V-Twin Motorcycle Oil purchased on 3/19/19 and Harley-Davidson Screamin’ Eagle SYN3 purchased on 3/19/19 in the CEC L45-KRL, ASTM D445 test.