Thanks, should have said I use synthetic in both.Toyota says 6 months with dino, 1 year with synthetic. You can often get synthetic on sale at a price competitive with dino.
Honda says max 1 year if the oil light doesn't come on. But if you change it early, you still have to reset the minder.
In your situation, I would change the oil and filter once a year.I don't travel much, under 5k miles per year. With that how often in time should I change oil, 2007 Toyota Sienna & 2012 Honda Accord? I've heard 6 months, 8 months and 1 year, what is right?
Thanks!
Do you drive each vehicle 5K per year or is that 5K total shared between the two? Is your accumulated mileage low because the vehicles sit idle a lot? When you do drive are the trips short or long? Lots of short trips where the oil doesn't warm up is considered to be a form of severe service where your owner's manual will tell you to cut the OCI in half.I don't travel much, under 5k miles per year. With that how often in time should I change oil, 2007 Toyota Sienna & 2012 Honda Accord? I've heard 6 months, 8 months and 1 year, what is right?
Thanks!
I usually change it every spring, as i live in cold winter climate, and I think the oil gets the most abuse in the winter with condensation, idle time and fuel dilution, therefore i think spring is the best time to do an annual oil change. Now if you live in Phoenix or L.A. a fall/autumn oil change may make sense to me. Just my opinion.If you’re only driving 5k a year don’t overthink this too much. Look at it this way, even if your engine dies an early death at 100,000 miles, that still means you have 20 YEARS before you have a problem. By then you’re likely to have gotten a different car.
I vote for changing it once every year (right before the cold winter weather)
That makes sense as well but if you live in an area with cold temperatures in the winter you want fresh oil in the fall just because the winter rating of your oil will slip as you get more miles on it. In other words if you started out with a 5w oil in the spring, by the time you get to the end of fall, that oil is likely to be a 10w oil and you could have a harder time starting the engine if you end up with an extremely cold morning that winter. Although it is less of a problem if the oil you started out with is a 0w oil.I usually change it every spring, as i live in cold winter climate, and I think the oil gets the most abuse in the winter with condensation, idle time and fuel dilution, therefore i think spring is the best time to do an annual oil change. Now if you live in Phoenix or L.A. a fall/autumn oil change may make sense to me. Just my opinion.
Agree, but this is when i suggest dropping the oil in the fall and just change to oil and not the filter or do two oil changes a year. Spring and Fall changes. Oil I my IMO needs to be changed in the spring on an annual change. Makes me sleep better LOL, just meThat makes sense as well but if you live in an area with cold temperatures in the winter you want fresh oil in the fall just because the winter rating of your oil will slip as you get more miles on it. In other words if you started out with a 5w oil in the spring, by the time you get to the end of fall, that oil is likely to be a 10w oil and you could have a harder time starting the engine if you end up with an extremely cold morning that winter. Although it is less of a problem if the oil you started out with is a 0w oil.
Each go about 5K per year, short trips around a rural town, maybe once a year longer trip in Toyota, serval 100 mile trip.Do you drive each vehicle 5K per year or is that 5K total shared between the two? Is your accumulated mileage low because the vehicles sit idle a lot? When you do drive are the trips short or long? Lots of short trips where the oil doesn't warm up is considered to be a form of severe service where your owner's manual will tell you to cut the OCI in half.
Good reply - if the OP wants a bit more of a warm feeling , then consider that once a year oil change with a M1 EP oil of your choice or ditto with the Castrol 25K mile extended performance oil .If you’re only driving 5k a year don’t overthink this too much. Look at it this way, even if your engine dies an early death at 100,000 miles, that still means you have 20 YEARS before you have a problem. By then you’re likely to have gotten a different car.
I vote for changing it once every year (right before the cold winter weather)
One year or 5,000 miles (8,000km) whatever comes first.
Off the shelf oils? Any big name or little name (Kirkland/Supertech) will do.
Oil filters? Carquest or OEM.