It is a wet clutch, as it sits in oil. It is a wet clutch, as it sits in oil.
unless your Mazda has a wet clutch , as motorcycles do, you don't have clutch oil
A 2 stroke engine with a wet clutch should use 70weight oil. It is really called gear or manual transmission type oil as the gears are also using this oil. Yes you can use car oil in a 4 stoke bike with a wet clutch but try to find oil that has as little additives as possible.
This is a "wet" clutch, it runs in the oil that fills the primary drive casing
10w 40, wet clutch oil.
10w 40 wet clutch oil.
A wet clutch sits in the engine oil, which cools it and keeps it clean. As the clutch wears, the engine oil washed off the metal dust, which is then removed from the oil by the oil filter. A dry clutch isn't cleaned or cooled by anything (other than air). If you take the clutch cover off, you'll see a bunch of metal dust in there. Generally speaking, automobiles have dry clutches and motorcycles have wet clutches. A notable exception is Ducati's motorcycles, which have dry clutches. Advantages of a wet clutch: -lasts longer -handles abuse better (e.g., can stay partially engaged without overheating) Advantages of a dry clutch: -doesn't contaminate the engine oil -more efficient in terms of power transfer (since the oil in a wet clutch absorbs some of the energy that would normally go to the transmission)
80w wet clutch
yes. wet clutch.
About 2.5 Quarts of 10w 40 wet clutch oil.
10w40 motorcycle oil, because of the wet clutch.
There is no transmission oil, its what is considered a wet clutch the engine oil lubricates the clutch, 2 quarts will fill the engine oil.