In the abstract, that’s impressive. It would never work for me because I’m just too OCD about maintaining my cars in a more conventional way. 

It’s a moot point. Any of these engines that call for an Xw20 will run fine their entire lives on Xw30s, and even if the 20 maintains MOFT over the life, there’s no downside to the additional protection of a 30 wt. When realizing engines that rack up 7 digits of mileage are spending most of that at highway speeds, there’s a relatively small fraction of its life spent warming up, so it’s a best case for the oil. Either one will serve the engine well.Honestly, I’m one of those guys that bumps up his viscosity to a 5W30 when it reaches around 120,000 miles (from 0W20).
The guy did have a burnt valve at 920,000 miles. But I like to be proved wrong - and I’m not sure this proves it - but I do like the fact this guy went 1,000,000 miles using a group lll 5W20 in Texas heat. Makes me wonder if I should drop my viscosity back down to 0W20? probably won’t because the 5W30 seems to be doing great (no drop in fuel economy whatsoever). But it’s soemthing to consider, maybe.
What are you talking about re struts?An Accord 6/6 is a bucket list car for me.
Honda J30s have always been an impressive engine to me. So , so , so smooth with nice power delivery. And the 7th gen Accords drive so nice. Too bad they switched to struts in the front for the 8th generation.
What are you talking about re struts?
I figured in the Texas heat he’d bump it up to a 5W30 or something, but he didn’t.
Can you share any of those examples?I've seen examples of engines run on xW-20 and 10K mile OCI wiped out before 200K miles. Many more than the million mile examples.
So which example should you base your choice on?
An Accord 6/6/2 (6 cylinder, 6 speed, 2 door) is uncommon.An Accord 6/6 is a bucket list car for me.
Honda J30s have always been an impressive engine to me. So , so , so smooth with nice power delivery. And the 7th gen Accords drive so nice. Too bad they switched to struts in the front for the 8th generation.
An Accord 6/6/2 (6 cylinder, 6 speed, 2 door) is uncommon.
But the 7th generation 6/6/4 (6 cylinder, 6 speed, 4 door) is quite rare. It was only made in 2006 and 2007. And I'm pleased to say I have one. It may become a Honda collectable - if there is ever such a thing. They aren't perfect (there is a bit of road noise, and replacing the timing belt is costly) but they are a good handling, very reliable sedan.
A friend who has been in the used car business for 20 years describes the 6/6/4 as the "Holy Grail" of Accords. There were a couple at the dealership when I bought mine but I've never seen another one in the wild. I bought mine new and the EX-L 6MT was the same price as the EX-L automatic.The coupes do pop up on occasion. I like Sedans. They are definitely rare!
Also, NA port-injected engine designs from 20 years ago are not exactly comparable to current TGDI applications.The fact that he did 80k miles on 5 cylinders should tell you that Highway miles are very easy miles.
But here we are yet again, discussing these super high mile examples that were done in a very short period of time, as if they applied to normal usage.
Yeah, I mentioned that there was a thread about the subject last year, I totally forgot about that (and actually posted on that thread several times). I didn’t realize the guy is now a member here, he did An excellent job posting about his journey on an accord forum, and I like his engine tear down video. Quite an accomplishment.This story was discussed a few months ago. The owner is actually a recent "Bob" participant.
It seems likely that valve clearances were never adjusted, the exhaust valves got a bit tight and one burned. And thus the engine didn't make 1,000,000 miles "all in one piece".