Wrong. That's typical American thinking. Engineers that built the engine say to use vanilla. Owner says strawberry.
Correct.... UNLESS those same "engineers" say to use 0W-16! Then you automatically know they're full of
Wrong. That's typical American thinking. Engineers that built the engine say to use vanilla. Owner says strawberry.
Well, he is lucky it didn’t lock.I must've mentioned my neighbor's 2002 Audi A4 w/3.0l V6?
The neighbor said, "I keep adding oil and it keeps smoking."
I drained ~11 quarts of oil from the engine. The oil was filled with black crumbs, like crumbs in a toaster's catch tray.
I drove the car until it stopped smoking. FYI: It takes 6 qt.
I strained the crumbs out with cheesecloth and reused it (always efficient)
I'm talking about different guys in one shop, they have no incentive to gouge anything, just different ideas about what is correct for the 2014+ 5.3.Probably sell more oil = $$$$. It's all about price gouging these days.
One ship, I repeat, one ship, turns sideways in the Suez Canal. Entire planet pricing goes through the roof.
Wasn't like ALL the canals were shut down. Just the one little Suez. Which BTW, pushes 12% of our global shipping traffic, ONLY.......... Think about it.
This is because the original manual called for 8.5 quarts, then GM issued an update that corrected the manual to 8 quarts. It applies to all 2014-2018 5.3 and 6.2 engines. Also, having changed the oil on both these engines, the dipstick doesn't seem to be very accurate either. After the update to 8 quarts, I put that in during an oil change and then checked the dipstick. It was low by about a quart. Yet if you add another quart and bring it up to the full mark then take it for a 10 minute drive the dipstick will show over by about .5 quarts or more. Let it sit and cool back down, it'll be lower than the full mark but at least be between the Add and Full lines. Not sure why these engines do this as every Chevy 350 I've ever dealt with took 5 quarts exactly and never had any issues with the dipstick reading correctly.One I don't get is the 5.3 on 2014+ GM trucks. We have one oil changer who insists on 8 qts, one who insists on 8.2 qts, and most of the mechanics want 9 qts.
My sons 1996 Toyota Corolla's engine (1.8) holds 3.7 qts. He adds 4 qts. and calls it a day.My truck takes 7.75 quarts...I should be safe just putting in 8 quarts, right?
I would do the same. It's only 1/4 of a qt.My truck takes 7.75 quarts...I should be safe just putting in 8 quarts, right?
If anyone tells you putting 8 qts in will cause harm, I would really doubt their automotive knowledge frankly.My truck takes 7.75 quarts...I should be safe just putting in 8 quarts, right?
We drained 1.5 quarts from the engine.............................We didn’t record the change in horsepower in that particular episode
(other case)...........eventually drained over three quarts of excess oil from the engine before the oil pressure stabilized at higher engine speeds and the power gain was substantial – well in excess of 10 horsepower.
OK understood, but that article REALLY didn't address your finer points nor did directly address the fact that some clown puts three qts over max.........kinda is an idiot and shouldn't even pop the hood..
'Likely'? Is 'likely' safe enough for you? These runs only revealed the obvious oil pressure issues. Nobody was looking into these engines. There could have been issues even at lower engine speeds which just nobody noticed. There even could occur issues with less overfilling, e.g. when cornering or braking and the crankshaft hitting the oil at one end of the engine. You won't suffer from this on a rolling road and we don't know this, at least this article doesn't reveal anything about this. However, be assured the manufacturer knows more than you.
Of course it depends on the actual engine and some other factors such as incline, acceleration, braking, cornering speeds etc..
However, because it DOES depend on several factors unknown to most, as a GENERAL recommendation, you have to be careful with generalizations.
Therefore it's dangerous making general claims such as 'it doesn't matter' or 'one more quart is ok' because in some cases it actually DOES matter (or isn't 'ok'). This is the 21st century and many people lack reading comprehension. As a result many readers tend to take generalized recommendation down the wrong pipe. What remains behind is 'it doesn't matter on any car' and that's potentially fatal.
The correct oil level is where the correct oil level is - between MIN and MAX. Do with your own car what you like to do with it, but please be careful with general recommendations on public forums.
.
And MORE is best.If a little is good, then moar is better!![]()
And ALL is bestest!!And MORE is best.