It sure does!Doesn't yours have an oil life monitor?
It sure does!Doesn't yours have an oil life monitor?
Then I’d do 5k.
Doesn't yours have an oil life monitor?
It sure does!
You guys get oil change discounts?
All we get out of the Rockies is tacos for home runs at Taco Bell, which adequately describes what you’ll get when you get home after eating them, too. LOL.
I was wondering if there is new space age oil that would safely allow me to extend that, Ted.
That said, I run 10k intervals on all my cars (including the 230k mile E55) but that's what the manufacturer recommends or more conservative than.
I just RTFM. On car #1, it says to change every 6mo or 6kmi, which ever comes first, and that's what I do. The other two cars have OLMs, and I follow them.
Found your problem . . .I bought a Chevy HHR (manual transmission, woo-hoo!) used with 103K miles a few years ago. Followed the OLM, which usually resulted in 6K-8K oil change intervals. However, I was disappointed in the amount of sludge present when I replaced the primary timing chain at 165K. Not terrible, but not almost perfectly clean like previous vehicles where I stuck to 3K changes. So now I will change oil at 50% OLM. OTOH, my daughter's Honda was very clean when I adjusted the valves recently at 100K. She has gone by the OLM since new, usually at 15%.
I bought a Chevy HHR (manual transmission, woo-hoo!) used with 103K miles a few years ago. Followed the OLM, which usually resulted in 6K-8K oil change intervals. However, I was disappointed in the amount of sludge present when I replaced the primary timing chain at 165K. Not terrible, but not almost perfectly clean like previous vehicles where I stuck to 3K changes. So now I will change oil at 50% OLM. OTOH, my daughter's Honda was very clean when I adjusted the valves recently at 100K. She has gone by the OLM since new, usually at 15%.
I just RTFM. On car #1, it says to change every 6mo or 6kmi, which ever comes first, and that's what I do. The other two cars have OLMs, and I follow them.
Yeah, I definitely follow RTFM on mileage. On calendar time, not always.
When I was hunting for the longest manufacturer oil changes I noted that numerous manufacturers don’t specify mileage at all anymore. Just the “go when the car sensor says to” stuff. Many FMs don’t have it anymore.
Yes, that's what they've been moving towards. Really it makes more sense if the sensor is done correctly, and the manufacturers have put a lot of work into those sensors. What I'm not convinced on is if they've correctly evaluated how the engines likely end up behaving once you get 100k+ miles worth of real use.
Perhaps they might have a reason not to care if we make it over 100,000 miles? LOL.
Hahahahaha welcome back to the 70s?
Like I said, I think the real issue is that I'm not sure if they're able to correctly account for the real world effects with time, and what I'm really talking about is sludge etc.
That also depends on what oil people dump in their cars. Using the correct viscosity and service classification is important over the long haul. And who knows what the quick lube places dump in, probably whatever bulk oil swill they got a good deal on.
I bought a Chevy HHR (manual transmission, woo-hoo!) used with 103K miles a few years ago. Followed the OLM, which usually resulted in 6K-8K oil change intervals. However, I was disappointed in the amount of sludge present when I replaced the primary timing chain at 165K. Not terrible, but not almost perfectly clean like previous vehicles where I stuck to 3K changes. So now I will change oil at 50% OLM. OTOH, my daughter's Honda was very clean when I adjusted the valves recently at 100K. She has gone by the OLM since new, usually at 15%.
Hyundai is pretty smart warrantying their cars for that long for that reason and I'm sure it gains them sales as a result.
LOL!
https://www.toyotaofoxnard.com/lifetime-oil
A quick search shows a bunch of toyota dealers selling "lifetime" oil service plans.
Looks like she is paying for oil changes she isn't using.
One of the advantages to the Diesel is that the oil is solid black from the first time you start it after an oil change. Makes it easy to see on the dipstick.You folks running 10K on their oil....how does it look, smell and 'drip' at change-time?
Maybe that beautiful honey-gold thickness when you first put it in is not so important?
It was tempting to me but for two things. One of the bosses went that route on a higher end one and it made it eight years before he got tired of taking it in for that warranty coverage. LOL.
The other is, there’s either a glut or lease returns or a bunch of people defaulting on Toyota Corollas around here. I don’t know if this is national, but if someone wants a Corolla, search Denver and come drive one home.
If I needed or wanted to replace the daily driver right now, there’s Corollas a year old with 20K on them coming out of dealer’s ears out here right now. Most advertised for $12K or lower.
Only downside for us would be we really need AWD/4WD out here a few times a year. But for the vast majority of the year an econobox would be fine for commuting and errands, as long as the dogs weren’t coming along.
Heck with blankets in the back, they’d fit. The 95 lb one wouldn’t be happy but he’d figure it out. Ha.
Of course used Subaru’s are a dime a dozen around here also but not as cheap as the Corollas. If you plan for oil leaks and a failed CVT (those idiots... why Subaru?!) they’d be a fine option for full time AWD.
CVT. Subaru. Really? Really. Ugh.
You folks running 10K on their oil....how does it look, smell and 'drip' at change-time?
Maybe that beautiful honey-gold thickness when you first put it in is not so important?
I'm not a big CVT fan as the reliability is still not where it needs to be. I think the OEMs are realizing it's a good idea that the execution thereof just isn't very reliable, and thus they're better off going to the bunch-of-gears automatics instead. 95+% of the benefit with fewer failures.
Do you have any idea how the original owner did on changing oil? My experience is that most car owners are terrible about changing oil at the prescribed intervals and that may have been the real issue.
Like any other oil change. I remember the first time I used Mobil 1 and let it go 10K, it came out awfully thick and black, and I swore off doing that again. That was well over 10 years ago, though. I just did oil changes in the Mercedes (V12, 10K miles) and the F150 (bi-turbo V6, 10K miles) and both looked fine. I was tempted to send samples off to Blackstone and see how well the oil was doing, but didn't this time. If I keep either one until their next oil change, I will for sure. But, I figure if the manufacturer is telling me 10K miles is OK to run with full synthetic, I'll believe them. It's in their interest for their vehicles to have a reputation for longevity, and not have 10 year old cars and trucks spewing oil smoke. If you see older cars from a particular manufacturer consistently leaving a blue cloud behind them (80s Chryslers come to mind), are you inclined to buy new from that manufacturer? I'm not.You folks running 10K on their oil....how does it look, smell and 'drip' at change-time?
Maybe that beautiful honey-gold thickness when you first put it in is not so important?
Do you have any idea how the original owner did on changing oil? My experience is that most car owners are terrible about changing oil at the prescribed intervals and that may have been the real issue.
Why I buy used cars with questionable oil-change histories, I do a very-short-interval (like 250-mile) oil change using something like Mobil Delvac or Shell Rotella that's rated for both gasoline and diesel engines. Then I repeat it a few times at still-short, but progressively-longer intervals determined by how bad the first drain was. The extra detergency in diesel-rated motor oil tends to clean things out. But it also tends to clog the filters if the engine is really bad, hence the short intervals.
It's not without its risks, but I've been pretty lucky so far.
Amen to that. Two changes to my car buying habits in the past few years. First, I think my 2011 F150 will be the last new vehicle I buy -- ever. A year or two old, looking like brand new, with the teething issues already fixed and a five-figure amount lopped off the price is fine, thanks. I've really gotten over the whole new-car romance thing.So, I think my summary is I wouldn't bother doing that again, and if the vehicle was bad enough I thought it needed that, I probably just shouldn't buy it.
You folks running 10K on their oil....how does it look, smell and 'drip' at change-time?
Maybe that beautiful honey-gold thickness when you first put it in is not so important?
A similar trick I did on my Range Rover ('97 bought with 68k miles - super sludgy) was add some ATF and do a short oil change.
With that said, I've become less convinced that doing such heroic efforts necessarily increases the longevity of the engine over the time period that I'm likely to keep it. In roughly 20 years of vehicle ownership with probably something around 400k miles covered and 50 vehicles, I've only had one engine failure, and that was a thrown rod on a GM 6.5 turbo diesel. That may have been oil related if the construction company never changed the oil on it, but hard for me to say. It threw a rod one year and 30-35k miles after I bought it and for various reasons I think the damage was done before I bought it.
So, I think my summary is I wouldn't bother doing that again, and if the vehicle was bad enough I thought it needed that, I probably just shouldn't buy it.
You folks running 10K on their oil....how does it look, smell and 'drip' at change-time?
Maybe that beautiful honey-gold thickness when you first put it in is not so important?
Well... That depends. I wouldn't buy one as a DD, but I might as a hobby car.
Rich
Heard from a friend that they had just had the oil changed on an European import.... At nearly 25,000 miles. They forgot to have it done earlier. Shop said oil looked fine...
One of the most reliable engines ever made thoughRear main seal on every 4.0L they ever made. LOL. Marked their territory.
One of the most reliable engines ever made though