All over the web (here and elsewhere) I've seen hundreds of message board posts from people whose cars "don't burn a drop of oil" between changes. I've had three cars and each of them burned some oil. The 1988 Tercel had a worn ring in one cylinder, and I'm pretty sure the 1983 280zx had stale valve seals which seemed to cause the engine to burn oil only on extended trips at highway speeds, so I figured they had excuses. My 07 Civic (w/ about 13k miles on it) seems to burn roughly 1 quart per ~6000 mile OCI (going by the OLM). I don't have a problem with checking the oil and topping it off (indeed, I kind of miss having to tinker more often like I did with my previous two cars
) but it just seems like it'd be nicer if the new engine didn't burn meaningful amounts of oil.
I can think of a couple of possibilities:
1) I attract oil burning engines. I don't really believe this is true, because that would be rather superstitious.
2) A good number of engines (old and new) actually burn oil and some percentage of the people who claim their engines "burn no oil at all" don't really know what they're talking about. (I do know that *some* engines don't really burn any oil to speak of. My girlfriend's high mileage 1993 Volvo 850 is in this category. I have it running Valvoline MaxLife 10w-30 and have never had it drop more than 1/8 of a quart or so in a 4000 mile OCI. It usually doesn't drop at all).
I don't thrash on my cars, but I do drive spiritedly sometimes. My daily commute is about 15 minutes on the highway one way, and includes 3 or so miles at medium/high RPMs (3500-4000 in the Civic) to ascend a long grade. This high RPM section never seemed to contribute to oil burning in my 280zx (which was spinning at 3200-3500 for the ascent) but it could have an effect on the Civic I suppose.
I'm running Exxon Superflo 5w-20 right now, and wondering if switching to a slightly heavier oil (like perhaps MobilClean 5000 5w-20) would help, although there doesn't seem to be a huge viscosity difference among the conventional 5w-20 oils.
There are lifetimes more experience on this board than I have. So what's the skinny? Is this kind of oil burning on a new but broken-in engine normal or not? I figured any burning would've been stopped by around 10k miles but that doesn't seem to be the case.

I can think of a couple of possibilities:
1) I attract oil burning engines. I don't really believe this is true, because that would be rather superstitious.
2) A good number of engines (old and new) actually burn oil and some percentage of the people who claim their engines "burn no oil at all" don't really know what they're talking about. (I do know that *some* engines don't really burn any oil to speak of. My girlfriend's high mileage 1993 Volvo 850 is in this category. I have it running Valvoline MaxLife 10w-30 and have never had it drop more than 1/8 of a quart or so in a 4000 mile OCI. It usually doesn't drop at all).
I don't thrash on my cars, but I do drive spiritedly sometimes. My daily commute is about 15 minutes on the highway one way, and includes 3 or so miles at medium/high RPMs (3500-4000 in the Civic) to ascend a long grade. This high RPM section never seemed to contribute to oil burning in my 280zx (which was spinning at 3200-3500 for the ascent) but it could have an effect on the Civic I suppose.
I'm running Exxon Superflo 5w-20 right now, and wondering if switching to a slightly heavier oil (like perhaps MobilClean 5000 5w-20) would help, although there doesn't seem to be a huge viscosity difference among the conventional 5w-20 oils.
There are lifetimes more experience on this board than I have. So what's the skinny? Is this kind of oil burning on a new but broken-in engine normal or not? I figured any burning would've been stopped by around 10k miles but that doesn't seem to be the case.