old thread, I know... but pertinent data to follow up on Medobson1's info
First, oils have to fall within a range to be labeled a certain weight, so actual viscosities can vary quite a bit between manufacturers.
40W viscosity range at 100c: 12.5 to 16.3 cSt
50W viscosity range at 100c: 16.3 to 21.89 cSt
And some examples:
Type, Viscosity 40c (cSt), Viscosity 100c (cSt)
Mobil 20w50, 185, 20.5
Mobil 15w50, 125, 18.0
Mobil 20w40, 118, 14.2
Mobil 10w40, 89.3, 13.3
Mobil 5w40, 80.0, 13.7
Mobil 0w40, 78.3, 13.8
So we see that the hot viscosity varies a bit depending on the basic (cold) weight, with a higher basic weight typically having a slightly higher hot viscosity. Otherwise, a 0w40 is pretty much the same as a 20w40 at running temperatures where it matters, until the oil degrades. Mobil still claims 10,000 mile service intervals, but that seems a bit far fetched; I'd like to see viscosity data at 1000mile intervals up to 10k miles, but I don't see anything like that online right off.
Anyways, Its getting into the colder months in Colorado (30f overnight at 60f highs), so i'm switching from 15w50 to 0w40 for a few months.