That looks so dark. What oil were you running previously? Do you have any varnish or crud when you look under the fill cap?2018 Honda CRV. 46388 miles on vehicle, 1672 miles on this oil. Yes, that is correct. Oil is Castrol Euro 5W40.
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With only 46k on the motor and 1700 on that I hope its a lighting thing.That looks so dark. What oil were you running previously? Do you have any varnish or crud when you look under the fill cap?
That looks so dark. What oil were you running previously? Do you have any varnish or crud when you look under the fill cap?
With only 46k on the motor and 1700 on that I hope its a lighting thing.
Not a lighting thing. This engine destroys oil quickly due to the known high fuel dilution. Previous oil was the same: Castrol Euro 5W40. No varnish that I could see but it's hard to see down there due to a plastic filter that Honda installed in there.Known history? As asked previous oils? Previous OCI's? Was filter changed on this round?
I know a lot of people on here will have a fit, but I actually remove the filter, drain it, and put it back on. I've never had an issue with leaking or damage to the filter. If by some chance that were to happen, WalMart and O'Reillys are 2 miles away.That's part of the reason I'm not a fan of not changing the filter. The 7317 filters hold almost 1/2 quart so dirty, fuel diluted stays there to mix with new.
Future daughter-in-laws Tucson is about the same as you. about 6k per year with fuel dilution. I made her OCI 6 months/3k miles with filter change. You used to be able to see her oil level rise on dipstick with factory OCI and that stuff was NASTY.
If I was you I look at getting some Premium Guard XL's from Rock Auto or CarQuest Premiums from Advance for the cost difference and change it each time.
For me at that effort I'm going to replace it but if it works for your schedule, you be you. $13 each for a potentially wavy leaking bypass valve FE7317 vs under $5 PG4612EX.I know a lot of people on here will have a fit, but I actually remove the filter, drain it, and put it back on. I've never had an issue with leaking or damage to the filter. If by some chance that were to happen, WalMart and O'Reillys are 2 miles away.
It actually works quite well for me. And I go on a ~30 mile drive before changing the oil so the oil is nice and hot and flows well.For me at that effort I'm going to replace it but if it works for your schedule, you be you.
If you don't open up the ADBV somehow, there will still be a lot of oil inside the filter. It just won't all drain out of the center tube without breaking the vacuum by opening the ADBV.2. remove oil filter and place it upside down in a drain container.
Understood. But some comes out, which is better than none coming out.If you don't open up the ADBV somehow, there will still be a lot of oil inside the filter. It just won't all drain out of the center tube without breaking the vacuum by opening the ADBV.
This is how much more oil that came out of this filter after I first drained it without opening the ADBV, and then I opened the ADBV with a couple of Q-Tips bent in half. It measured out to be 6 oz. The ADBV was holding all that oil inside the can, even with the filter positioned base down, it won't drain unless you break open the ADBV.Understood. But some comes out, which is better than none coming out.
I'm just going to say that the ark colored plastic dipstick thing for my old eyes sucks. The dots maybe help some.
Looks good and at least if you pick a consistent check method you'll know if issues. My future-daughter-in laws Tucson goes higher on dipstick due to fuel dilution and short trips.