My first post in quite a few years, but this conversation I think deserves a bit of a data dump on lubricants. I hope that fits with the spirit of the discussion. By the way, my SCUT is a CubCadet Yanmar Sc2400 and it is also a low use machine. I also have quite a few smaller machines.
I'll do this in two parts There are basically three properties of any lubricant that you care about: film strength, stickiness, and whether or not it has a detergent agent added. Stickiness and detergent are exactly the opposite properties of each other, and that gets to the heart of this discussion, but let's start with film strength since that is widely misunderstood.
film strength is the actual lubricating property. Does the oil resist the pressing of the parts such that they don't actually touch but slide on the oil film between them. It is incredibly difficult to measure this property, so a substitute metric is used, which is the weight of the oil. This sort of works except that synthetic oils have a much higher natural film strength than petroleum distillates, so you can use a lighter weight and get the same result. This will work will with detergent oils and is pointless with sticky oils. The reason is that the whole point of a detergent oil is to dislodge and transport sludge from the moving parts through circulating system to the filter. If there is no circulating system then both detergent oils and synthetics are a total waste of money. Heavier oils tend to be more resistant to flow without being sticky, so by increasing the weight, they will tend to stay on the parts that need lubrication longer. If you are concerned about a low use machine or one that is subjected to cold, then a heavier or multi-grade oil that thins as it warms is a good solution.
If you are concerned that an engine has been sitting for too many weeks without running, then when you start it, before putting a load on the engine, let it idle a couple minutes to ensure that the circulating system has given everything a nice fresh coat of lubricant from the reservoir. The quick application of a load will not generally impact cylinder walls, but if a bearing has gone dry or nearly so, loading it before it is relubed by the pump is not a good thing.
Sticky oils are expensive and often difficult to find.