You will be fine at 6k miles, that is by no means pushing it. Look at the recent 23,310 mile Subaru UOA, he is doing fine. I do 10k and my outback is fine, granted it’s the port injected 2.5. As others have said, run it to the factory OCI, do a UOA, adjust from there. That should give you plenty of peace of mind.Good morning, I have a 2025 Subaru Crosstrek with the 2.0L FB20 engine that I bought brand new last October. So far, I’m sitting at around 18,500 km and I’m almost due for my third oil change. I have been doing 5,000 km OCIs with my local Subaru dealership using their bulk-fill Castrol 0w16.
I had originally planned to move up to a 10,000 km oil change interval with Mobil 1 ESP 0W-30, but even with all the data available, I’m struggling to make a decision. The factory oil change interval is 10,000 km, with no severe-duty schedule listed. I live in Ontario, Canada, and I never idle to warm up or really take short trips in general. Any establishment is far enough away from my house that the oil and coolant have a chance to come fully up to operating temperature.
Is my anal-retentive demeanor and constant anxiety about the condition of the car enough to justify sticking with the factory 10,000 km oil change interval? Or should I tighten that up to 6,000 km and never worry about it? I’m not concerned about the cost--it’s cheap to service in the grand scheme of things.
I was only born in 2001, but I can’t wrap my head around the modern mindset of trying to use a lubricant for as long as possible. My previous GDI Hyundai Accent would turn 0W-20 into water within about sixteen minutes. /shrug
View attachment 338151
Fixed it for you...Unfortunately, our friends up North (and the rest of the world)mayhave to explain things in simpler terms that will not confuse those on this side of the border, that are SI (metric measurement system) challenged.
Rather impertinent.Fixed it for you...
"Tribol" - nice!The Tribol Leaders have spoken …
Permission granted to do 10k in that communist unit of measurement![]()
Yeah, have worked in both units allot - only see issues when people convert rather than learn the new system …"Tribol" - nice!
Sort of related, back when Canada was transitioning to S.I. (c. 1976), there was a conspiracy theory that this was done so that people would be happier with their malaise-era cars - a major failure after the odometer had passed 99,999 km was easier to take than a failure at 62,000 miles.
It was a low point for reliability and longevity, with very complex carburetors, air pumps, the early days of flaky electronic ignition, catalytic converters, etc.
Little did we know that a golden age of reliability was on the horizon.
We started learning S.I. in Jr High, about five years before Canada started going over. (IIRC, speed limits and distance signs in 1976, new car odometers 1976 and 1977, and everything else January 1, 1979.)Yeah, have worked in both units allot - only seen issues when people convert rather than learn the new system …
(Per Dr. Google) the metric system came first, and was subsequently refined into the Systeme International d'Unites (SI) with basic units being standardized.Who decided it needed to be renamed SI instead of the good old metric system?
Shortly before "metrification" I heard a man in the men's-wear department of a Sears store say to his wife, somewhat jokingly, "Well, I better stock up on shirts before neck size is in kilopascals".It will always be that "goofy French metric stuff" to me.
Later... I'm off to buy a firken of beer and a peck of apples.![]()
The Metric System is old (1795). Napoleon even banned it and called it stupid.(Per Dr. Google) the metric system came first, and was subsequently refined into the Systeme International d'Unites (SI) with basic units being standardized.