Which is a bit different than some supposed additive that makes the oil "better".Authorized VW/Audi 508.00/509.00 spec oils have a blue dye, and perhaps other markers which can be found in testing (so I read on the internet).
Which is a bit different than some supposed additive that makes the oil "better".Authorized VW/Audi 508.00/509.00 spec oils have a blue dye, and perhaps other markers which can be found in testing (so I read on the internet).
This is a whole lot of word salad to just say, "Mobil 1 and TGMO are different oils. They are both acceptable, regardless".As for Mobil making Toyota oil... AFAIK Genuine Toyota motor oil and Mobil 1 use the same base oils. You might be correct in saying the additive package is somewhat diiferent. For the sake of discussion, let's assume the additive package is different. So what? Different does not mean it's better or worse. It means a different approach was used. Both approaches can be good. Do you think Toyota knows more about making oil than Mobil does? Mobil made the Toyota oil with the additives that Toyota requested. If Toyota and Mobil 1 oils have some differences in additives, I'm equally confident in both brands of oil. Also, having the same or very similar base oils would make them similar. I have equal confidence in both, but M1 costs less at Walmart.
Has this changed in the last 6-12 months? Because this is Hondas ultimate full synthetic oil:OEM Genuine Honda motor oil is made by Idemitsu. It's the same motor oil, but it's cheaper when purchased with Idemitsu name on the bottle. Rockauto, NAPA and some other autostores sell Idemitsu oils. Oreilly does not.
OEM Genuine Toyota motor oil is made by Mobil (according to Lake Speed Jr). At least for Toyota oil sold in USA. It might differ elsewhere in the world. As far as I know, all Toyota oil is synthetic oil. It's Mobil 1 oil in a Toyota bottle. You can buy the same oil for less money by buying Mobil 1 from Walmart.
I'm not suggesting anyone needs to limit themselves to those car brand OEM motor oils, but if you want to stay with them, then I suggest buying them from lower cost sources as I described.
Product Identifier: Other means of identification: Honda Genuine Ultimate Full Synthetic Motor Oil
Honda Genuine Ultimate Full Synthetic Motor Oil, SAE 0W-20
Honda Genuine Ultimate Full Synthetic Motor Oil, SAE 5W-20
Honda Genuine Ultimate Full Synthetic Motor Oil, SAE 5W-30
Honda Genuine Ultimate Full Synthetic Motor Oil, SAE 10W-30
SDS Number: 817725
Intended Use: Automotive Engine Oil
Uses Advised Against: All others
Emergency Health and Safety
CHEMTREC 800-424-9300 (24 Hours)
Number:
CANUTEC 613-996-6666
CHEMTREC Mexico 01-800-681-9531
Manufacturer:
Phillips 66 Lubricants
P.O. Box 4428
Houston, TX
I don't know. See Post in thread 'Oil Choice For New Honda 3.5L' https://bobistheoilguy.com/forums/threads/oil-choice-for-new-honda-3-5l.398021/post-7314168Has this changed in the last 6-12 months? Because this is Hondas ultimate full synthetic oil:
View attachment 291509
And this is P66 oil:
View attachment 291510
Notice any differences or similarities?
Oh, also this too:
Idemitsu made Honda oil in prior years. Then they went to P66.I don't know. See Post in thread 'Oil Choice For New Honda 3.5L' https://bobistheoilguy.com/forums/threads/oil-choice-for-new-honda-3-5l.398021/post-7314168
What you said seems plausible in regard to Honda Genuine motor oil. I wonder if Idemitu is still making Genuine Honda PSF, DW-1 ATF, gear oil, etc?Idemitsu made Honda oil in prior years. Then they went to P66.
Honda and P66 have a huge partnership now, including their racing section: http://phillips66lubricants.com/news/honda-racing-partnership/
https://www.machinerylubrication.com/Read/30480/phillips-66-honda
It seems unlikely that Honda would have huge partnerships with P66 and switch back to Idemitsu so based upon this info, I'd say the Idemitsu is old/outdated or Honda is making multiple partnerships that aren't public to deliver their oil to customers, maybe depending on geographic locations.
Very possible. P66 probably just gave them a nice discount for bulk supply vs Idemitsu so their partnership and cheap product = winWhat you said seems plausible in regard to Honda Genuine motor oil. I wonder if Idemitu is still making Genuine Honda PSF, DW-1 ATF, gear oil, etc?
VCM-3 does not appear to have the same issues as VCM-1 and -2. There are some anecdotal stories on Odyssey forum about issues but not nearly as widespread as prior years. That said, mine has been muzzled since week 1 of us owning it. =o]With the cold and short trips, I would recommend doing OCI at 5k not MM. Do one or two UOA after your normal intervals, use Oil Analyzers or others that do GC (not Blackstone) and make sure to request the GC for fuel dilution. I didn't request on one from Oil Analyzers so they didn't do it. Base your OCI's from there. The Lake Speed thing is good but that will give you results possibly 4 years from now depending on use.
I drove my wife's '19 Pilot a bit longer to get it hotter but no long trip. The oil test IMO was what the motor sees everyday, no special accommodations. Lots of short trips, sits outside 24/7/365, not as cold as OP. https://bobistheoilguy.com/forums/threads/blackstone-vs-oil-analyzers-pp-euro-l-5w-30-5175-miles-19-pilot-67k-miles.392379/#post-7154514
M1 ESP has more certifications and an excellent choice. For me the VRP is in my Pilot with a big reason that the VCM is active and knowing history of ring issues caused by VCM in older Honda's. I'd rather prevent that issue and changing earlier is helpful IMO. UOA is great reference and I do them. The cost of UOA = DIY cost of oil change for me or basically like changing every 2500 miles with no UOA for same cost. One of my vehicles is on 3k/6 month from tested fuel dilution, one is now on 4k changes that had motor replaced due to oil burning, stuck rings, scored cylinders at ~7500mile maintenance minder changes at dealer prior.
The VRP 0W-20 is easy to get, will keep it clean, satisfy warranty documents, not expensive for early changes. If your UOA shows high wear metals due to short trips and fuel dilution, bump to higher grade like 5W-30 VRP. Keep all the information and if any ever issues you can show why you went higher viscosity.
Next oil change in the Pilot I'll probably do a UOA just to check on the VRP 5W-30 as this is my second OCI with it. Might be a bit off as it will be probably about 5500 miles with a 4-5 day, 1000 mile round trip to Virginia upcoming in 2 weeks.
That seems plausible.Very possible. P66 probably just gave them a nice discount for bulk supply vs Idemitsu so their partnership and cheap product = win
A cautionary tale:I'm open to other options FYI
TGMO 5W-30 is still conventional.OEM Genuine Honda motor oil is made by Idemitsu. It's the same motor oil, but it's cheaper when purchased with Idemitsu name on the bottle. Rockauto, NAPA and some other autostores sell Idemitsu oils. Oreilly does not.
OEM Genuine Toyota motor oil is made by Mobil (according to Lake Speed Jr). At least for Toyota oil sold in USA. It might differ elsewhere in the world. As far as I know, all Toyota oil is synthetic oil. It's Mobil 1 oil in a Toyota bottle. You can buy the same oil for less money by buying Mobil 1 from Walmart.
I'm not suggesting anyone needs to limit themselves to those car brand OEM motor oils, but if you want to stay with them, then I suggest buying them from lower cost sources as I described.
Exactly. Honda isn't using Honda oil. They are buying the cheapest bulk oil they can find that barely passes spec.I would think if there was a problem with Honda oil, Honda dealers wouldn't be using it. Then again, their bulk tanks may be refilled regularly from "Joe's Custom Blended Motor Oil & Salvage Yard". No offense to the Joes out there.
I don’t think many people realize that most of the world views oil as a fungible commodity. Which means they will always shop on price and choose the minimally sufficient product. Dealers are no exception. They’ll use whatever they can get cheaper through local distributors, as long as it meets the not-remotely-stringent Honda requirements.Honda dealers are selling it, but the techs are more than likely not using it on your car when it's serviced. Who knows what their bulk stock actually is.
Doesn't that describe ⅓ of BITOG members too?I don’t think many people realize that most of the world views oil as a fungible commodity. Which means they will always shop on price and choose the minimally sufficient product.
There used to a time when you were reasonably assured that dealerships would be using their manufacturers branded oil mostly - like TGMO at Toyota dealership, BMW Twin-power at BMW dealrships, but nowadays it's likely that it is mostly bulk oil (cheaper than the rest) that meets spec - though I am not sure how anyone can say for sure which oil comfortably passes specs vs one that barely passes spec.Exactly. Honda isn't using Honda oil. They are buying the cheapest bulk oil they can find that barely passes spec.
Dealerships don't have to use the OEM oil. His point is that dealer service department bulk tanks are often filled with the cheapest "meets the spec" oil that they can locally source.I am sure that the Honda branded oil at their dealerships are made to their specifications. I am sure that Honda is not overpaying for the oil, but to say it "barely passes spec" ---> do you have any proof or inside knowledge on that?
They don't use OEM oil, just like you don't get TGMO at Toyota dealers. Like others have mentioned, you get cheap bulk oil. This is corroborated by many people who work at dealers in the service department. They are there to see how the bulk tanks get filled. For Toyota anyway, you can pay more and specifically request TGMO, but again, it's a special request and more expensive. Doing an HPL change yourself would be far cheaper.I am sure that the Honda branded oil at their dealerships are made to their specifications. I am sure that Honda is not overpaying for the oil, but to say it "barely passes spec" ---> do you have any proof or inside knowledge on that?
And using a commonly available Walmart oil, would be far far far cheaper, than HPL. Doing an HPL change yourself would be far cheaper.