RC Oil To Weight Calculator

Convert RC shock oil data with clear tuning steps. Compare cSt, oil weight, and mass. Download setup records for smarter track changes today easily.

Calculator

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Formula Used

This calculator uses an interpolation curve to estimate RC oil weight from cSt, or cSt from oil weight.

How To Use This Calculator

  1. Select the conversion mode.
  2. Enter cSt, WT, or oil volume.
  3. Use the brand factor if your bottle scale feels different.
  4. Enter temperature details for a running-condition estimate.
  5. Add piston hole data for a simple flow comparison.
  6. Press calculate to show the result above the form.
  7. Download CSV or PDF records for your setup sheet.

Example Data Table

Oil Weight Approximate cSt Typical Feel Use Case
20 WT 200 cSt Fast rebound Low grip or light cars
30 WT 350 cSt Balanced damping General track setup
40 WT 500 cSt Slower shock action Bumpy tracks or harder landings
50 WT 725 cSt Firm damping High bite or heavy models
80 WT 1400 cSt Very firm movement Special tuning tests

RC Oil Weight Guide

RC suspension oil changes how a model lands, turns, and holds grip. A thicker oil slows piston movement. A thinner oil lets the shock move faster. Many racers talk in weight values. Many bottles also show centistokes, or cSt. These scales are not identical across brands. This calculator gives a practical bridge between them.

Why cSt Matters

Centistokes measure kinematic viscosity. It is a physical value. It lets you compare oils with less guesswork. Weight is a hobby label. One brand's 35 weight may not match another brand's 35 weight. That is why the tool uses a reference curve and a brand factor. You can adjust the factor when your oil line feels different.

Temperature And Track Feel

Oil becomes thinner when it gets warm. It becomes thicker when it gets cold. A car tuned in a cool room may feel softer outdoors. The temperature correction estimates that shift. It does not replace testing. It helps you predict which bottle may feel close after conditions change.

Using The Mass Estimate

The calculator also estimates grams from milliliters. This helps when you fill shocks by weight, log oil use, or plan pit supplies. Silicone shock oil is usually close to one gram per milliliter, but density changes by product. Enter the bottle density when it is listed. Otherwise, the default gives a practical estimate.

Better Setup Records

Use the CSV and PDF options after each run. Save the oil, temperature, piston data, and notes together. Over time, your setup sheet becomes more useful than a single conversion. Compare results after jumps, bumps, and long runs. Small changes are easier to understand when every test is recorded.

Reading The Result

Start with the equivalent cSt and weight. Then check the corrected viscosity. The damping index compares your oil with a common 30 weight baseline. A value above one means slower shock action. A value below one means faster action. The piston flow index adds hole size and hole count. It is only a guide, because piston shape, shaft speed, seals, and air volume also matter. Use it to compare your own changes, not to judge every car. It keeps tuning simple when several oils look similar on paper.

FAQs

Is RC oil weight the same for every brand?

No. Oil weight is a hobby label. Different brands can use different scales. cSt is better for comparing products across brands.

What does cSt mean in RC oil?

cSt means centistokes. It measures kinematic viscosity. Higher cSt oil is thicker and usually slows shock movement more.

Why does temperature matter?

Oil thins as it warms and thickens as it cools. Temperature correction helps estimate how the same oil may feel during a run.

Can I use this for diff oil?

You can estimate viscosity and mass, but diff oil ranges are often much thicker. Use the result as a guide, not a fixed rule.

What is the brand factor?

The brand factor adjusts the reference curve. Use 1 for a neutral estimate. Raise or lower it when your oil line differs.

What density should I enter?

Use the density from the oil bottle or data sheet. If none is listed, 0.965 g/mL is a practical starting estimate.

What does damping index show?

It compares your corrected viscosity with a 30 WT baseline. A higher index means firmer damping. A lower index means softer action.

Are the CSV and PDF files saved online?

No. The export buttons create files in your browser. They help you save setup records on your own device.

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