What API CK-4 means
API CK-4 is a service category from the American Petroleum Institute (API) for heavy-duty diesel engine oils. API uses two families of letters: categories beginning with “C” are for compression-ignition (diesel) engines, while categories beginning with “S” are for spark-ignition (gasoline) engines. API CK-4 belongs to the diesel family and is one of the current heavy-duty diesel categories, intended for modern diesel engines including many on-highway trucks and other equipment.
Like other API categories, CK-4 describes a tested level of performance — covering areas such as wear protection, deposit control, and oxidation resistance. This is separate from the viscosity grade, such as 15W-40 or 10W-30. An oil must meet both the specification and the grade your manual lists.
Diesel and gasoline oils differ
Diesel and gasoline engine oils are formulated for different operating conditions and emissions hardware, so a category like API CK-4 should not be treated as interchangeable with a gasoline category. Diesel oils are generally built to handle the by-products of diesel combustion and the demands of diesel after-treatment systems, and their additive packages reflect that. For this reason, the correct category for your engine depends on the engine type and what the manufacturer specifies.
API CK-4 supersedes the earlier API CJ-4 category and is generally designed to be backward compatible with it in the correct viscosity grade. Fuel sulfur level and after-treatment hardware can affect service intervals, so check the engine maker’s guidance. There is also a related category, FA-4, aimed at certain low-viscosity diesel applications, which is not interchangeable with CK-4.
What to follow
Use the category and viscosity grade stated in your owner’s manual. Diesel engines, especially those with after-treatment systems, can be sensitive to the wrong oil, so match the manual’s specification rather than choosing an oil by category family alone, and confirm before use.