I do not know the answer. Are you saying piston melting due to pre-ignition?
That's my understanding.
I do not know the answer. Are you saying piston melting due to pre-ignition?
You are going love the oil change so easy filter n drain plug right in the front no obstruction to the filter. I don't even jack it up put one tire on the curb.That's the plan. No maintenance history on Carfax but what I can see from the oil fill hole looks clean. GM's severe service for the transmission is every 45k, lifetime fill for standard service.
I plan on doing two spill and fills with some Valvoline Dexron IV to get rid of what is in there, probably the factory fill. Then I'll do a couple with HPL's ATF-Green. Bought a case for the Mazda that got totaled, lucky me it uses the same HPL Green.
I'll probably do all the fluids this weekend. I've got some Mobil 1 Synthetic 75W-90 already for the rear diff and transfer case.
Coolant and spark plugs will be next in the coming month or so.
Transmission drain is right there too. Seems to be easy to work on.You are going love the oil change so easy filter n drain plug right in the front no obstruction to the filter. I don't even jack it up put one tire on the curb.
I just did first oil change on GMC terrain used OE filter and Kirkland 0/20 caught on sale but mostly short trips changed OLM hit 5%. Bizzare thing AWD takes 5.3 qts FWD takes less If I remember correctly 4.2qtsMy wife's 2018 1.5L Equinox is approaching 76,000 miles and all I have done is use whatever 0W-20 is on sale and change it between 5-6K miles, and most of the time I use regular 87 octane. Most of the trips on that car is highway though. She works from home so most of those trips are to the cabin and back.
No, but it keeps the combustion chamber cleaner, and the deposit will be softer. Take into consideration that the turbo has a lower compression ratio, so there is no need for high octane; however, premium fuel has more combustion energy anyway.Will that raise the octane rating?
It’s not bad at all. The only thing is getting the fill cap off and a funnel in without burning your hands off. Thus, do it coldTransmission drain is right there too. Seems to be easy to work on.
Thanks. It can provide for a more efficient extraction of the energy (if the engine can compensate), but the total BTU content of the two will be the same.No, but it keeps the combustion chamber cleaner, and the deposit will be softer. Take into consideration that the turbo has a lower compression ratio, so there is no need for high octane; however, premium fuel has more combustion energy anyway.
I wish auto engineers would make sumps that take exactly 5 or 6 quarts. My Toyota V6 is supposed to take 6.4 qts but I dump in 6 and the dipstick is at the full mark. The Chevy 1.5l is hilariously small at 4.2 qts.I just did first oil change on GMC terrain used OE filter and Kirkland 0/20 caught on sale but mostly short trips changed OLM hit 5%. Bizzare thing AWD takes 5.3 qts FWD takes less If I remember correctly 4.2qts
Agree 100%I wish auto engineers would make sumps that take exactly 5 or 6 quarts. My Toyota V6 is supposed to take 6.4 qts but I dump in 6 and the dipstick is at the full mark. The Chevy 1.5l is hilariously small at 4.2 qts.
It’s not bad at all. The only thing is getting the fill cap off and a funnel in without burning your hands off. Thus, do it cold.
I wish auto engineers would make sumps that take exactly 5 or 6 quarts. My Toyota V6 is supposed to take 6.4 qts but I dump in 6 and the dipstick is at the full mark. The Chevy 1.5l is hilariously small at 4.2 qts.
4.2 is for FWD 5.3 qts for AWD which is confusing both the same 1.5 turbo 4 cylinder. I will say I just put in 5 qts was at the full mark or close enoughI wish auto engineers would make sumps that take exactly 5 or 6 quarts. My Toyota V6 is supposed to take 6.4 qts but I dump in 6 and the dipstick is at the full mark. The Chevy 1.5l is hilariously small at 4.2 qts.