Class 8 Diesel

Best Diesel Engine Oil
for Semi Trucks

Looking for the best diesel engine oil for semi trucks? AMSOIL Signature Series Max-Duty 15W-40 (DME) is our recommended choice for heavy-duty Class 8 engines. Formulated with premium synthetic base oils, it delivers 6X more scuffing protection than required by the Detroit Diesel DD13 specification standard. Backed by regular oil analysis, it allows fleet operators to confidently extend drain intervals up to 3X over standard OEM recommendations.

CK-4
Current API Spec
15W-40
Primary Viscosity
3X
Max Extended Drain (OEM)
10+
OEM Fleet Target Lines
DME Wear Protection

Top Picks

AMSOIL provides two tier options for heavy commercial freight equipment depending on your drain strategy, wear protection targets, and fleet size requirements.

Best Overall

AMSOIL Signature Series Max-Duty 15W-40

DME | API CK-4 / SN

Top-tier full synthetic engineered to provide maximum engine life under extreme high-temperature operating loads. Delivers up to 76% less oil burn-off than standard API CK-4 criteria require.

Shop DME →

Value Pick

AMSOIL Heavy-Duty Synthetic Diesel Oil 15W-40

ADP | API CK-4

100% synthetic formulation balancing exceptional engine protection with competitive pricing. Provides up to 66% less operational oil consumption compared to standard CK-4 testing benchmarks.

  • API CK-4 / CJ-4 / CI-4+ Certified
  • 4X better wear protection vs test limits
  • Excellent viscosity control against soot thickening
  • Allison TES-439 Approved
  • Engineered for standard OEM factory drain windows

Shop ADP →


API Specs: CK-4 vs FA-4

Both performance categories handle modern emissions requirements, but their distinct film properties limit interchangeability.

FeatureCK-4FA-4
HTHS Viscosity Limits≥ 3.5 mPa·s (Robust oil film)2.9–3.2 mPa·s (Lower drag target)
Fuel Economy AdvantageStandard baselineMeasurable fuel reduction
Backward CompatibilityYes — replaces CJ-4, CI-4+, legacy specsNo — restricted to cleared platforms only
Primary Freight ApplicationBroad Class 8 useSelect newer fuel-efficient engines
Legacy Equipment SafetyYesNo — may accelerate bearing scuffing
Mixed Fleet SelectionYesOnly when owner's manual explicitly lists FA-4
⚠ FA-4 Warning: Using FA-4 in an engine not approved for it can result in thin oil films under load. Always cross-check the engine data plate and owner's manual before specifying FA-4.

Full breakdown: CK-4 vs FA-4 | Which Diesel Oil Spec Does Your Engine Actually Need →


Viscosity Grades for Semi Trucks

15W-40 is the baseline across most Class 8 applications. Cold climate operations and specific OEM approvals may call for a different grade.

15W-40
All-Season Primary

Global baseline for long-haul operations. Retains thermal protection across varying loads.

10W-30
Cold Climate Flow

Improves pumpability in lower operating ranges. Reduces cold-start wear risk.

5W-40 / 0W-40
Extreme Winter

Maximum cold-flow in extreme cold zones. 0W-40 offers 4X better cold-cranking than 15W-40 in ASTM D5293 testing.

10W-40
Specialty / Vocational

Applied in specific legacy or vocational applications where OEM guidance calls for it.

Viscosity by temperature and engine: Semi Truck Oil Weight Chart →


Choosing Oil by Duty Cycle

The same engine can have different oil requirements depending on how it's being used. Long-haul highway miles are the friendliest environment for extended drain programs. Vocational and urban operation are not.

Best for extended drains
Long-Haul Line-Haul

Sustained highway RPM, stable oil temperature, minimal cold-start cycles per operating hour. The Cummins X15 is approved for drains up to 75,000 mi under CES 20086 with an approved CK-4 synthetic and oil analysis. Detroit DD15 supports similar intervals under DFS 93K222.

DME 15W-40 with oil analysis is the correct specification for this application.

Cummins X15 engine oil →
Follow OEM intervals
Vocational & Severe Service

Dump trucks, cement mixers, refuse, logging, oilfield. Frequent cold starts, high idle, extreme load cycling, and contaminant ingestion shorten oil life significantly. Extended drains are not the right call here.

ADP 15W-40 meets EOS-4.5 for Mack heavy vocational. Protection under extreme stress is the priority over drain interval length.

Mack MP8 engine oil →
Use oil analysis to decide
Urban & Regional

Short haul, frequent stops, engine-off cycles. Cold-start wear events accumulate faster than in line-haul. Fuel dilution is a real risk. Oil analysis is still useful here, but the economics of extending drains past 2X OEM are weaker.

The Volvo D13 VDS-4.5 extended drain approval applies to normal service — not urban severe duty.

Volvo D13 engine oil →

By Engine | OEM Oil Specs

API CK-4 is the floor. Every major OEM runs its own proprietary validation on top of that. Your oil needs to pass both.

Cummins X15 / X12
CES 20086 | CK-4

Strict limits on thermal breakdown, valvetrain fatigue, and soot accumulation. Both DME and ADP approved.

Cummins X15 Engine Oil →
Detroit DD13 / DD15 / DD16
DFS 93K222 | CK-4

Detroit's scuffing wear defense specification. Fully certified by both DME and ADP.

Detroit Engine Oil →
Volvo D13
VDS-4.5 | CK-4

Strict shear thinning and oxidation limits under heavy long-haul cycles. Fully certified.

Volvo D13 Engine Oil →
Mack MP8
EOS-4.5 | CK-4

Mack's flagship heavy transport protocol. Approved across both AMSOIL product lines.

Mack MP8 Engine Oil →
PACCAR MX-13 / MX-11
Caterpillar ECF-3 / API CK-4

Fully compliant via standard API CK-4 and Caterpillar ECF-3 benchmarks.

PACCAR MX-13 Engine Oil →
International (Navistar) A26
API CK-4 / Ford WSS-M2C171-F1

Meets performance criteria for International line-haul engine architecture.

International LT Engine Oil →
Universal Rule: For mixed fleets with engines of different ages and specs, a premium API CK-4 15W-40 is the safest single-SKU choice across the board.

AMSOIL DME is approved for your X15, DD15, D13, MP8, and MX-13. One oil. Every major Class 8 engine.

See DME Pricing →

Drain Intervals | OEM vs Extended

Standard factory intervals are built around conventional oil performance — not what a premium full synthetic can sustain. Upgrading to DME or ADP and enrolling in oil analysis is how Cummins, Detroit, and Volvo's own extended drain programs are designed to work.

EngineOEM Interval (conventional)Extended Drain (approved synthetic + analysis)
Cummins X1515,000–25,000 miUp to 75,000 mi — CES 20086 program
Detroit DD1515,000–25,000 miUp to 75,000 mi — DFS 93K222 program
PACCAR MX-1315,000–25,000 miUp to 75,000 mi — ECF-3 / CK-4 approved
Volvo D1315,000–25,000 miUp to 60,000 mi — VDS-4.5 program
Mack MP815,000–25,000 miPer EOS-4.5 program parameters
International A2615,000–25,000 miPer CK-4 / Ford WSS-M2C171-F1 parameters
Vocational / Severe DutyFollow OEM severe-service guidanceOil analysis required before extending

Extended drain approvals apply to normal line-haul service using a qualified CK-4 synthetic and an approved oil analysis program. Severe-service applications follow OEM severe-service guidance.

Oil Analysis for Semi Trucks | How to Extend Drain Intervals Safely →

Diesel Oil Change Intervals for Semi Trucks →


AMSOIL vs. The Competition

Every oil below carries a CK-4 stamp. The specification sets a floor — it doesn't define the ceiling. These figures are from published manufacturer technical data sheets and third-party test results.

OilTypeHTHS (mPa·s)4-Ball Wear (mm)Noack %TBNAllison TES-439Extended Drain
AMSOIL DME 15W-40Full Synthetic4.30.363.7%10.03× OEM w/ analysis
AMSOIL ADP 15W-40Full Synthetic4.30.363.7%10.0OEM interval
Shell Rotella T6 15W-40Full Synthetic4.00.484.4%9.0OEM interval
Mobil Delvac 1 ESP 5W-40Full Synthetic3.70.473.1%9.0OEM interval
Chevron Delo 400 XSP 15W-40Full Synthetic4.00.444.1%10.0OEM interval
Valvoline Premium Blue Extreme 15W-40Full Synthetic3.90.454.3%9.5OEM interval
Castrol Vecton 15W-40Full Synthetic4.10.464.2%9.5OEM interval

Four-Ball Wear and HTHS data from published manufacturer technical data sheets. Lower wear scar = better protection. Higher TBN = more acid-neutralizing reserve. CK-4 minimum HTHS is 3.5 mPa·s.


Best Diesel Engine Oil For Semi Trucks
Frequently Asked Questions

AMSOIL Signature Series Max-Duty 15W-40 (DME) is the top-tier choice for Class 8 commercial engines. It carries API CK-4 certification alongside OEM approvals for Cummins CES 20086, Detroit Diesel DFS 93K222, Volvo VDS-4.5, Mack EOS-4.5, and Allison TES-439. Combined with oil analysis, it supports drain intervals up to 3X OEM recommendations — lowering per-mile maintenance cost without compromising protection. Shop DME →
For most Class 8 engines in line-haul service, 15W-40 is the correct specification. It provides robust oil film thickness under high load and high temperature. In sustained cold-weather operation — consistently below -15°C / 5°F — a 10W-30 or 5W-40 grade approved by your OEM provides better cold-start protection. Always cross-check your engine's owner's manual before changing viscosity grades.
API CK-4 requires a minimum HTHS viscosity of 3.5 mPa·s, providing the oil film thickness needed for both current and legacy Class 8 engines. API FA-4 is engineered with lower HTHS (2.9–3.2 mPa·s) for fuel efficiency gains in specific late-model engines designed for thinner oil films. FA-4 is not backward compatible — using it in an engine not approved for FA-4 can accelerate bearing and ring wear. When in doubt, use CK-4.
OEM factory intervals are typically 15,000–25,000 miles and are built around conventional oil performance. With a premium CK-4 full synthetic and an active oil analysis program, approved intervals extend significantly: Cummins X15 and Detroit DD15 up to 75,000 miles, Volvo D13 up to 60,000 miles. These aren't AMSOIL claims — they're the OEM extended drain programs. Oil analysis is what makes those intervals defensible on your specific engine. Learn about oil analysis →
Yes. AMSOIL Signature Series Max-Duty (DME) carries approvals for Cummins CES 20086, Detroit Diesel DFS 93K222, Volvo VDS-4.5, Mack EOS-4.5, and Allison TES-439, among others. AMSOIL Heavy-Duty Synthetic (ADP) carries the same OEM approvals. These appear on AMSOIL's published OEM approval list, which is maintained as specifications are reissued.
Peterbilt and Kenworth specify oil by the engine installed, not the truck brand. A Peterbilt 579 with a PACCAR MX-13 follows PACCAR's specification (ECF-3 / CK-4). A Kenworth T680 with a Cummins X15 follows Cummins CES 20086. Factory fill is typically a conventional or synthetic-blend oil. Switching to a CK-4 full synthetic at or before the first drain is the standard upgrade path for owner-operators running extended intervals.
TBN — Total Base Number — measures the acid-neutralizing reserve in the oil. Combustion produces acids as a byproduct. Fresh AMSOIL DME 15W-40 starts with a TBN of 10.0. As the oil ages, TBN depletes. When it drops below 2–3 (depending on the lab), the oil needs to be changed regardless of mileage. A higher starting TBN gives you more runway. It is the single most important variable in determining whether an extended drain interval is safe for your specific engine in your specific duty cycle. Oil analysis tracks TBN depletion in real time.
Chemically, yes — AMSOIL DME and ADP are compatible with other CK-4 oils, conventional or synthetic. Mixing will not damage the engine. However, mixing resets the extended drain clock: AMSOIL does not support extended drain interval claims for mixed fills. If you top up with a different brand on the road, treat the sump as a standard OEM interval fill and change at your normal schedule.

Ready to Switch?

AMSOIL synthetic diesel engine oils deliver long-term wear protection, minimize oil burn-off, and lower total fleet maintenance cost per mile.

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