Originally Posted By: FutureDoc
Originally Posted By: Triton_330
Originally Posted By: FutureDoc
Quote:
What *I* was trying to say is that the only people that should be in trouble are the places selling oil without any API certs whatsoever.
And that is exactly what is happening.
"SA" is NOT a current API certification. Only SJ and newer are current API certs categories. The lawsuit is filing for both the SF and SA misrepresentation. Thus both the SA and SF are in the legal cross-hairs for misrepresentation.
Nothing was being misrepresented. The bottles both say exactly what they are. It's the customer's fault for not looking at what they were buying. There's no reason for DG to have to stop placing those oils on their shelves. They are labeled as to what they are. If idiots buy them and mess up their cars, that's their own fault.
People who don't understand oil specs shouldn't be changing their own oil in the first place. *They* should be going to a mechanic shop or dealer to have their oil changed.
It is not a recognized and currently used spec! That is the exact problem! You can't call it a "API Service Category SF" if API does not consider that "category" a current service category. Worse, the bottle says "SF quality" which means they have likely not really gone for that service quality! It lacks both the donut and the starbust!
It is bad when the BITOG poster does not know what the API categories mean so what about the less-than-average (which is about half of the population) consumer thinking?
*****, dude I know what the specs are and what they mean. The reason we're arguing is more than likely political. I know those are old specs! If they aren't truly API certified then yah I would suggest removing them from the shelves. But if they are API certified, I don't care if the spec is out of date, as long as the spec is listed on the bottle, there is no deceit happening.
If the bottle clearly states its API spec, there should be no problem. It's the customers duty to know what their vehicle needs. If they don't know what kind of oil their car needs, it's their own fault if they buy improper oil for their vehicle.
As I have said before, I once told a manager of a gas station that he was selling oil that did NOT have any API certification, and he told me to leave.
I don't want oil that isn't certified on the shelves. But if the oil is certified, even if the spec is outdated, as long as it clearly states which spec it is and what years of vehicles it can be used in, it is totally fine for it to be on the shelves.