Well, I am not sure I've gotten enough responses to be statistically valid

, but it does appear that the majority of racers do use Red Line and are happy with it. I have posted on Porsche 964, 964 Turbo, Porsche Performance Mod, forums on Rennlist. Also, the Porsche, Ultima, and Kit Car forums on Pistonheads.
Orinn at Eurosports Ltd in Denver, an independent Porsche technician, says that they use Red Line ShockProof exclusively, unless directed otherwise by the owner. He also said, "We have also seen very good success with the Redline gearlube running in GT3R's in the Speed Challenge Series...if it works well for them, that is another good datapoint." Taylor Racing also endorses Red Line Shockproof gear oils in their racing-- Hewland, Webster, Staffs-- transmissions and transaxles; see
Taylor Racing "All About Oils" where he says that, "Redline “Shockproof” oil is the only recent development we have seen that actually works, and we highly recommend it."
Several of the Rennlist Forum crowd use Mobil 1 in their gearboxes, but I got the feeling that they were following the liturgy of the church of Renn. Not to say that it isn't very good gear oil, I am sure it is outstanding, but I did not see an extreme pressure or shock proof type of gear oil listed for Mobillube. Amsoil, while not mentioned by anyone responding to my posts, also has an Extreme Pressure synthetic gear lube whose web pages read almost identically to Red Line's technical discussions. Castrol, like Mobil, did not have an extreme pressure product either. I was somewhat surprised by the Lucas Oil's lack of a product that I would consider a candidate for use in a G50. Swepco, the preeminent oil for pre '87 Porsche transaxles, is dino oil also and probably not suitable for G50 use for us.
Here is a listing of the synthetics I found:
Redline 75W90, 75W90NS, ShockProof Light/Heavy Gear Oil
Mobilube 1 SHC 75W-90
Mobilube HD LS 80W-90 (limited slips)
Amsoil SEVERE GEAR™ Synthetic Extreme Pressure (EP) Lubricant 75W-90 (SVG)
Castrol SYNTEC Full Synthetic Gear Oil 75W-90
I'd have to say that, if I were going out to buy gear oil today, I believe I'd be buying ShockProof Heavyweight gear oil. If I had a freshly rebuilt transaxle, I'd probably run the Lightweight for break in and then switch to the heavy. The only knock that I heard on the heavyweight is that it is hard to pump in during the winter months. From a cost perspective, it is less than a buck more per quart.
Regards,
Lynn