bloc
SILVER Star
I haven't seen many people claiming amsoil is bad or will ruin transmissions, just that taken as a whole it isn't necessary, and given the experience of most of the people here, may not even be beneficial.The thing about anecdotal evidence, is that it's still evidence. It may be weak individually, but if you go looking around, you'll see a pattern of similar anecdotal tales. While there aren't many tales of Toyota transmissions failing while running WS, there are some, but I think that's more a testament to their overall build quality than it is the quality of their ATF. They make great vehicles, not necessarily great fluids. Amsoil makes great fluids. Amsoil is to oil what Toyota is to vehicles. I think the combo could be excellent.
While there are anecdotal tales of trannies failing early with Toyota WS (albeit not many, but some) I have yet to find, after hours of research and googling, anybody with anything bad to say about Amsoil for any vehicle among users who have actually tried it, other than perhaps it's too expensive or overpriced snake oil or stuff to that effect.....or people who haven't actually tried it, but stick with the common, unquestioned wisdom that you MUST stick with OEM fluids, or else....
If Amsoil was really so dangerous and potentially harmful to OEM trannies, then we should be seeing negative reviews pop up, and plenty of "anecdotal" tales of people with ruined transmissions. But if you look around, you'll be hard-pressed to find any such tales. In fact, you'll find the exact opposite.....and plenty of stories of people who were having transmission trouble or general noise or poor shifting that actually improved after switching to Amsoil....and similar stuff for their engine oil. I know I sound like an Amsoil shill here, so let me say I'm sure any of these oils are fine and we're probably splitting hairs here, but at this point, I've gotta give the edge to Amsoil in terms of what I believe has the highest probability of longest term trouble-free operation.
A lack of evidence of failures running amsoil may simply be the small number of transmissions running it, with the exact same low failure rate of toyota transmissions. The sample size is so small we may never hear about the problems.
But draw whatever conclusions you want. For every anecdotal story of class-8 trucks running the stuff there are cities full of allison-equipped fire apparatus that run factory fluids under horrible driving conditions with negligible transmission failures.
Another conclusion we could draw from this is that it's good for allison transmissions to beat the hell out of them...