Indeed. No approvals.Recommended for...
Indeed. No approvals.Recommended for...
Interesting. How ACEA C3 and BMW LL-04 go along with Porsche A40? Aren't the first two mid-SAPS and the latter full-SAPS?If you search in the US:
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Versus searching in the UK:
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Link to the PDS for 5W-40: https://sharena21.springcm.com/Publ...9b0dfdd8/2bd3f516-f217-f111-b824-9440c99ff6c1
Agree it's an odd mix of recommendations.Interesting. How ACEA C3 and BMW LL-04 go along with Porsche A40?
My Corvette is direct injection but doesn’t have a problem with fuel dilution at all. My Civic is port injected.
Surely you must be kidding
I regularly do 7000-7500 mile intervals in my Corvette and 10,000 mile intervals in the Civic, using off the shelf oil that can be found in Walmart and Canadian Tire.
5000 miles is too early for most people unless it’s a severe fuel diluter. Even with a little bit of fuel, 6-7k intervals are fine. There are plenty of high mileage 1.5T Hondas out there chugging along just fine using intervals determined by their OLM (which means 9-10k)
Despite those reported troubles there are still examples of 1.5 Civics going 300,000 miles or more. One guy even has over 700,000 miles on one. So there’s that…As for your claim of "plenty of high mileage 1.5T Hondas out there chugging along just fine" the 1.5T engine has several well-known and generally acknowledged issues (fuel dilution etc. not just head gasket failures) that have definitely degraded Honda's reliability reputation.
I would say this is a fallacy. Most people in Europe never see autobahn speeds and spend their entire lives plodding along in the city traffic just like everyone that lives in NYC or Boston.Possible the 40 weight oil is just too thick here in the states with our low speed limits making the rings stick? Or is its just poor oil contamination or to long of an interval? Don't know, but many guys still had oil control rings sticking even doing just 5000 mile intervals on their Euro oils, so there is that. Many will say its bad engine design and engineering bla, bla, bla, but the ring sticking doesn't seem to happen in Europe where people can flog on them over there. It's the majority of the late model Audis here in the states where the speed limits are low. IMO you don't need the elevated HTHS here in the states as the engine doesn't heat the oil near enough at the low RPMS we drive at compared to the roads in Europe.
people like to imagine everyone driving 100+ mph everywhere in Europe but it's simply not the case. most of the speed limits are even lower than the US.I would say this is a fallacy. Most people in Europe never see autobahn speeds and spend their entire lives plodding along in the city traffic just like everyone that lives in NYC or Boston.
I thought this was a very interesting report from @panthermike posted here.Drained out the 3rd interval, just shy of 5k miles. Oil was subjectively dark. Happy to report zero oil consumption on this change. Prior to Valvoline Restore and Protect, engine burned no oil. 1st oci it burned 3/4 qt, 2nd was 1/2 qt. Ring cleaning perhaps? Got some fill hole pictures, which look good, doesn't add any data; just for fun.
Considering Valvoline Restore and Protect just went up to $38 everywhere, and I got Mobil 1 Advance Clean for $12 after rebate, I'm going to hopefully see if Mobil 1 does anything and then switch back to Valvoline Restore and Protect next year when hopefully prices come down.I thought this was a very interesting report from @panthermike posted here.
This illustrates an important example of why it's not a bad idea to run 4 OCIs at least of Valvoline Restore and Protect to clean any deposits up that you may not be aware you have.
Still $29.97 at Walmart and in stock in my area.Considering Valvoline Restore and Protect just went up to $38 everywhere, and I got Mobil 1 Advance Clean for $12 after rebate, I'm going to hopefully see if Mobil 1 does anything and then switch back to Valvoline Restore and Protect next year when hopefully prices come down.
But currently on my first Valvoline Restore and Protect trial and things seem smoother. We'll see what the oil looks like in 6 months.
What viscosity? 5w30 seems to be 38+ everywhere?Still $29.97 at Walmart and in stock in my area.
$30 on Amazon, fully stockedConsidering Valvoline Restore and Protect just went up to $38 everywhere, and I got Mobil 1 Advance Clean for $12 after rebate, I'm going to hopefully see if Mobil 1 does anything and then switch back to Valvoline Restore and Protect next year when hopefully prices come down.
But currently on my first Valvoline Restore and Protect trial and things seem smoother. We'll see what the oil looks like in 6 months.
Weird. Even Amazon is showing 39 for me. But that's 5w30. Other viscosity is 30.$30 on Amazon, fully stocked
5W-30Weird. Even Amazon is showing 39 for me. But that's 5w30. Other viscosity is 30.
Lucky. Oos all over in northern commierado.
I just picked up since I was there 2x 5qt 0W-20 (all they had), 1 x 5qt 5W-30 (last one), and 1x 5qt 5W-20 (they still have 4 of those left on shelf). 5W-20 vs. 0W-20 in my Accord or daughters CRV won't care......unless of course....obligatory BITOG "they're totaled".What viscosity? 5w30 seems to be 38+ everywhere?
Maybe it's a regional thing and they're out in my area. Might try to VPN and see. Where are you?