Is Amsoil actually good for 25k with their filter?

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Originally Posted By: troyb43
I have been doing the Amsoil thing now for over 100,000 miles, change it at about 21-22,000. Never any issues. Car is a Ford Focus. I have not had to add any between changes. Using the Amsoil oil filter as well. Just did a UOA on the last run of 22,000 and the TBN was 2.5, I am not going to complain about that. The car has about 149,000 on it now
I know of a courier running Amsoil filters and oil on a Nissan 4cyl pickup with 500,000 miles back in the middle 1990. It with his driving profile saved money!
 
If I knew how to post that I would, I'd be happy to send it to you to post. Sad you can't believe what I have to say though. I am not a liar about this
 
I don't care how good the oil is, how good the filter is, how big the sump is, how good of condition the powertrain is in, and how many UOAs you run --- running 25,000 mile OCIs is just asking for trouble. Still too many "unknowns"
 
Originally Posted By: AP9
I don't care how good the oil is, how good the filter is, how big the sump is, how good of condition the powertrain is in, and how many UOAs you run --- running 25,000 mile OCIs is just asking for trouble. Still too many "unknowns"


It's for clueless normal people who have never turned a wrench or have ever been to an automotive salvage yard.

The same kind of normal people who have solar panels on their roof and hire a garage door technician to lubricate their garage door.
 
You would be very fortunate if your engine did not consume some oil during a 25K run. If you are driving 25K per year, most of it is probably highway and you should be fine. I question whether it is worth the price however. Let's assume your sump is 4Q and your consume 1Q every 7500 miles. At $10/qt for Amsoil Signature, you have spent $60 for oil in 25K. With a long life competitor like M1 EP, you spend $30 for 15K. When you add the cost of a filter and labor (if any) it is probably a wash - and you take a higher risk of undetected problems with the longer OCI .
 
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Originally Posted By: AP9
I don't care how good the oil is, how good the filter is, how big the sump is, how good of condition the powertrain is in, and how many UOAs you run --- running 25,000 mile OCIs is just asking for trouble. Still too many "unknowns"


Really? Then how come Detroit recommends 50,000 mile, 1280 hr OCI's in their DD15 motor using conventional 10w30 oil? Or how about that there is not one heavy diesel OEM that recommends less than 25,000 miles except in the most extreme of situations? Most, even more... 35K on up. And doing what would be classed as "severe" with a car or pickup is a normal day for one of these motors. Navistar, Volvo, Mack, Paccar (Pete and KW), and Cummins. You left it wide open with your comment, so you can't legitimately throw out the apples to oranges argument. I took a Cummins N-14 to over 1.4 million miles without a engine problem on conventional Kendall oil and doing 30,000 mile oil changes. No bypass either. My present Detroit 60 just turned over 440,000 miles getting 25K mile OCI's and runs great. One of the best motors I have ever had. A real keeper.

I realize that many have a tough time changing the way they do things. But just because one doesn't "feel" that something is ok to do, does not mean that it isn't ok. Times change. Products change. But some find it oh so hard to change with them.
 
Originally Posted By: TiredTrucker
Originally Posted By: AP9
I don't care how good the oil is, how good the filter is, how big the sump is, how good of condition the powertrain is in, and how many UOAs you run --- running 25,000 mile OCIs is just asking for trouble. Still too many "unknowns"


Really? Then how come Detroit recommends 50,000 mile, 1280 hr OCI's in their DD15 motor using conventional 10w30 oil? Or how about that there is not one heavy diesel OEM that recommends less than 25,000 miles except in the most extreme of situations? Most, even more... 35K on up. And doing what would be classed as "severe" with a car or pickup is a normal day for one of these motors. Navistar, Volvo, Mack, Paccar (Pete and KW), and Cummins. You left it wide open with your comment, so you can't legitimately throw out the apples to oranges argument. I took a Cummins N-14 to over 1.4 million miles without a engine problem on conventional Kendall oil and doing 30,000 mile oil changes. No bypass either. My present Detroit 60 just turned over 440,000 miles getting 25K mile OCI's and runs great. One of the best motors I have ever had. A real keeper.

I realize that many have a tough time changing the way they do things. But just because one doesn't "feel" that something is ok to do, does not mean that it isn't ok. Times change. Products change. But some find it oh so hard to change with them.


i agree AP9 is wrong, im not arguing that point, just saying a semi can go longer because you have what 20L of oil in your sump? not 4. you start your truck and run 700-1100km in a day whereas there would be 30 cold starts on a normal car in what you do in a day. also your engine is meant to last, a rebuild costs you about $30k canadian because the parts are worth something. thats about 2 brand new civics. we drive throwaway cars, do lots of cold starts which is hard on oil with acids and startup wear and such which is concentrated in a small sump. you have a large sump, few cold starts and an engine thats built to last. deisel oil is better detergent wise too and 10w30 or 15w40 takes a lot longer to shear than 5w30.

but theres a guy on here doing 80k mile oci's with amsoil in an s2000 and no problems and some trucker with a million miles and never changed oil but they all have one thing in common. they add a LOT of oil. topping up the oil will always make an oil analysis look good. that trucker drained and added 12L of oil every 20k miles or so changing his massive bypass filters and full flow and the s2000 guy adds a ton of makeup oil too.

additives do wear out over time, the more oil you start with the longer you can go, top up and its fine. go 25k miles and your bound to burn some oil, change your filters and you have to top up.
i see no reason why an oil cant last 25k miles with no top ups if the conditions are right.
put a 50L sump on a semi, amsoil synthetic in it, a bypass filter, couple extra full flows, one of those burners to burn of fuel and other contaminates, have a big sleeper, tons of food and 4 guys, haul a tanker full of fuel connected to your gas tank and dont stop for anything. average 50mph, switch the 4 guys off and you hit 25k miles in 21 days. think he is ready for an oil change? i bet they could do 150,000 miles on that oil easy. thats only 125 days!
smile.gif

only way to know if it works in your car is try it. change filter and add that extra .4L at 12k and do an analysis at 20k leaving the oil in the car. if you drive under 15k a year just do a change once per year, plenty of other people do 15k with mobile one or other synthetics.
 
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Originally Posted By: slacktide_bitog
What car? What driving conditions?


When did this question become part of the BITOG internet engineers advisory process ?
 
Originally Posted By: Shannow
OneEyeJack,
remember that the Amsoil pledge is 25,000 miles, One year, or 700 hours, whichever comes first, in personal vehicles not undergoing "severe" service. (15,000 miles and the above two firsts for severe).

So if delivering pizza, you are probably stuck at 10-15,000 miles.

"Year or Two" as per your assertion isn't the formal equation.



Shannow slow down now as you are bringing order, logic, Amosil oil recommendations and reasoning into the process.

Not all of us are able to keep up with this approach and stay on track !!
 
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Originally Posted By: zpinch
Engine sumps seem to mature with mileage, up to a point, but this .................


Help me understand how engine sumps mature ??
 
I'm skeptical about 25K oil and filter change. I have Amsoil signature in my wife's car but change both oil and filter at 10,000 miles. The thing is that's what we drive in 12-16 months. In your case, I would go with Mobil 1 High Mileage and either a Mobil 1 or Fram Ultra filter and change it about 7,000 miles o whatever the owner's manual recommends.
 
There are differences, for sure, Festiva, but AP9 left the comment wide open. He said there is no way 25,000 mile OCI's are any kind of good irregardless of engine, oil, sump size, anything. So, my comment was indeed valid. He set the standard for the debate, I commented accordingly.

Sure, one can always come up with anecdotal examples of long OCI's someone is doing. That wasn't the point. I was stating that those OEM's themselves are recommending over 25,000 mile OCI's as a counter to AP9's argument. And they recommend those intervals on regular, off the shelf conventional oil, no bypass, none of the other stuff you mention either. Just simple drain and fill intervals with stock full flow filter. And many of those running over 25,000 mile OCI's are not using much more than about 2-3 quarts of oil in that time frame. And that on 13-15L engines. So make up oil isn't changing the dynamics much on 10 gallon sumps. That is equivalent to having to add 1/2 quart to a auto in 25,000 miles.

Either way, it is all just fascinating anyway. I only go to just under 10% left on the OLM on my pickup irregardless of the oil or filter. I have no interest at all in trying to establish some new OCI record. It is only 6 qts and a filter. Even if I was using Amsoil and their 25,000 mile claim. I just never felt the need to take them, or anyone else, up on it. Not sure why anyone else would either except just out of curiosity. My curiosity has never been that piqued.
 
Originally Posted By: anndel
I'm skeptical about 25K oil and filter change. I have Amsoil signature in my wife's car but change both oil and filter at 10,000 miles. The thing is that's what we drive in 12-16 months. In your case, I would go with Mobil 1 High Mileage and either a Mobil 1 or Fram Ultra filter and change it about 7,000 miles o whatever the owner's manual recommends.


Are you saying M1 oils are not good for 10K OCIs but Amsoil is?
 
Originally Posted By: Avery4
Is that actually safe? Could I actually use Amsoil Signature with their filter in a standard car and be good for 25,000 miles? If so, would that be as good as using Pennzoil Platinum with a Wix filter and changing it every 5-10k?


Safe? There are a lot of variables, but the short answer is "no". Not in any engine you care about at least. This isn't blindly bashing amsoil. Royal purple makes similar claims, it just really isn't, as a general rule, "safe" to run any oil that long.

I would much rather change it with fresh, additive rich pure oil every 10k than run the same oil for 25k. But YMMV
 
For traveling sale-person with 200-300 mostly highway miles Amsoil SS with Fram Ultra would be able to do 25k/6mo OCI in a good/clean engine.

If someone drives around 100-120 miles a day then Mobil 1 EP would be better choice for 15k/6mo OCI.
 
Originally Posted By: TiredTrucker
There are differences, for sure, Festiva, but AP9 left the comment wide open. He said there is no way 25,000 mile OCI's are any kind of good irregardless of engine, oil, sump size, anything. So, my comment was indeed valid. He set the standard for the debate, I commented accordingly.

Sure, one can always come up with anecdotal examples of long OCI's someone is doing. That wasn't the point. I was stating that those OEM's themselves are recommending over 25,000 mile OCI's as a counter to AP9's argument. And they recommend those intervals on regular, off the shelf conventional oil, no bypass, none of the other stuff you mention either. Just simple drain and fill intervals with stock full flow filter. And many of those running over 25,000 mile OCI's are not using much more than about 2-3 quarts of oil in that time frame. And that on 13-15L engines. So make up oil isn't changing the dynamics much on 10 gallon sumps. That is equivalent to having to add 1/2 quart to a auto in 25,000 miles.

Either way, it is all just fascinating anyway. I only go to just under 10% left on the OLM on my pickup irregardless of the oil or filter. I have no interest at all in trying to establish some new OCI record. It is only 6 qts and a filter. Even if I was using Amsoil and their 25,000 mile claim. I just never felt the need to take them, or anyone else, up on it. Not sure why anyone else would either except just out of curiosity. My curiosity has never been that piqued.



Yes I did paint with a broad brush there; however, for automotive internal combustion engines, I stand by my statement. Diesels for class 4-8 trucks are a whole different animal as they have vastly larger oil sumps (50+ qts in some cases), and I think everyone should be on board with the concept that more oil capacity translates to longer usable life, yes? But how many car or light truck engines can you name with sumps greater than about 8 quarts? A lot of things can happen over the course of 25,000 miles, and the majority of us are not just cruising along at constant low-load RPM for that full 25K.

Synthetic vs. conventional is almost a moot point nowadays, considering current Noack volatility and shear stability requirements outlined in API SN.
 
Originally Posted By: TiredTrucker
There are differences, for sure, Festiva, but AP9 left the comment wide open. He said there is no way 25,000 mile OCI's are any kind of good irregardless of engine, oil, sump size, anything. So, my comment was indeed valid. He set the standard for the debate, I commented accordingly.

Sure, one can always come up with anecdotal examples of long OCI's someone is doing. That wasn't the point. I was stating that those OEM's themselves are recommending over 25,000 mile OCI's as a counter to AP9's argument. And they recommend those intervals on regular, off the shelf conventional oil, no bypass, none of the other stuff you mention either. Just simple drain and fill intervals with stock full flow filter. And many of those running over 25,000 mile OCI's are not using much more than about 2-3 quarts of oil in that time frame. And that on 13-15L engines. So make up oil isn't changing the dynamics much on 10 gallon sumps. That is equivalent to having to add 1/2 quart to a auto in 25,000 miles.

Either way, it is all just fascinating anyway. I only go to just under 10% left on the OLM on my pickup irregardless of the oil or filter. I have no interest at all in trying to establish some new OCI record. It is only 6 qts and a filter. Even if I was using Amsoil and their 25,000 mile claim. I just never felt the need to take them, or anyone else, up on it. Not sure why anyone else would either except just out of curiosity. My curiosity has never been that piqued.


i know what you said is right, i just didnt want anyone else thinking they could do that in a car...
yes, even oem oci reccomendations for light duty diesels like f-350's are a fair bit longer than a passenger car, i just made that point to show that people can and have gone much much farther than reccomended on regular oil. just that i think you do need to top up in that time to do that. on a large diesel when they calculate how long they want to reccomend for an oci they wouldnt take any oil burning into account right? i think the 25k mile oci reccomendation on large diesels is the same as the 3 or5k oci's light cars have or used to have. safe for any reasonable application and you could probably go longer.
my curiosity was piqued when i found out honda reccomends 16,000km oci's with 32,000km filter change intervals on conventional oil. i thought there was no way you could do that if you wanted your engine to last longer than the warrenty. now im getting oil analysis and trying to see how far it can go
smile.gif



Originally Posted By: AP9
Yes I did paint with a broad brush there; however, for automotive internal combustion engines, I stand by my statement. Diesels for class 4-8 trucks are a whole different animal as they have vastly larger oil sumps (50+ qts in some cases), and I think everyone should be on board with the concept that more oil capacity translates to longer usable life, yes? But how many car or light truck engines can you name with sumps greater than about 8 quarts? A lot of things can happen over the course of 25,000 miles, and the majority of us are not just cruising along at constant low-load RPM for that full 25K.

Synthetic vs. conventional is almost a moot point nowadays, considering current Noack volatility and shear stability requirements outlined in API SN.


thanks for clarifying, but still, if your doing 25,000 miles (40,200km) in a year it has to be mostly highway driving. if you tow, race, drive in cold weather, mountainous areas or dusty areas you are in severe service which amsoil reccomends 15k for i believe.
so to qualify for their 25k you cant put any decent load on your motor, do any cold starts with it or drive where its dusty. and it has to be mostly highway miles. so most of the bad stuff in your 'a lot can happen in 25k' is irrelivant i think.
i would disagree with your synthetic vs. conventional statement. conventional is good enough for 99% of cars or big rigs on the road. i have 425k on my car engine that has been beaten on hard, raced, overheated, started in very cold winters down to -42c, seen a lot of gravel roads, towed and hauled heavy stuff and revvs at 3k rpm at highway speeds which is mostly what i drive with it. all on conventional oil. didnt burn a drop until last winter and i think that was because all the porcelin came off a spark plug and fell into the cylinder and scored it up. anyway, synthetic has better properties for more than just volitility and shear. if you drive a lot and dont want to change your oil every 3 weeks its the way to go. if all you do is race or tow close to your max weight rating and dont want to change oil every few times its the way to go. other than that if your going to change your engine oil at the manufacturers reccomendations there is really no reason to use synthetic that i can see. all the oil has to pass the same test so its good. but the kid that got 100% in math will probably make a better math teacher than the kid that got 51% even though they both passed. but if all you want is a secratary either one will do just fine.
 
And you point it out good. Amsoil even drops their 25K to 15K for severe service. Which always seemed amaze me when it comes to pickup trucks. The things that Amsoil and the OEM themselves list as "severe" is what the pickup was designed to do in the first place and the stuff they market the pickup to the public for. At least the heavy truck OEM's don't play these mind games. They only specify shorter oil changes if getting under a prescribed mpg, usually set at 6 mpg, or doing local P&D,stop and go, in city work. The auto and pickup OEM's just about list everything short of leaving your vehicle parked as being "severe" service.
 
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