quote:
Originally posted by carock:
A recent survey of SAE articles found MAJOR improvements in engine component life with bypass filters ( see Bypass Filter section and look for "SAE ON BYPASS FILTERS").Second to using a bypass filter, the best way to decrease the contamination level of your oil is to change it frequently.The UOA's you guys usually run do not take into account the increased level of contaminates that lap your engine components like a fine grinding paste. People who change their oil frequently will have substantailly longer engine life than people who do not, simply because of the reduced contaminates.You can argue the cost/effectiveness all you want, but frequent oil changes are better for your car, period.
I've not read the paper, but i would tend to agree with you. It certainly makes sense to me that a car with the oil changed every 3,000 miles will last longer with decreased wear than a car with 6,000 mile OCI's. Not to mention wear on related items not necessarily thought of as oil-related but nevertheless affected by an engine that is not properly maintained (eg tranny, cooling system, fuel system, etc...).
IMHO 4,000-5,000 miles on oil seems acceptable, but 10,000 miles just seem to be asking for trouble regardless of the choice of oil being synthetic of traditional dino.
I paid a little over 21,000 dollars for my car and spending 10-15 dollars every 3,000 miles seems a reasonable expense over the life of the car.
If you change the oil every 3,000 miles and drive it for 200,000 miles, that's around 67 oil changes. At 15 dollars each, thats around 1,000 dollars over the life of the vehicle.
Doubling your OCI will indeed save you 500 dollars, but over the life of the vehicle 500 dollars seems to be minor when compaired with the risk of having to rebuild the engine or related components.
Using synthetic oil may allow for extended OCI's but considering synthetic is 3x the cost of dino, you would have to triple your OCI's to 9,000. That may be acceptable for some engines but there are too many factors to allow for that across the board. Personally i would not feel comfortable going 10,000 miles on any kind of oil.
For those that bring up the argument of wasting resources changing your oil too often, it seems to me that changing it not often enough also wastes resources down the road with premature rebuilds, more gas burned, more components replaced early (O2 sensors, fuel injectors, batteries, etc.).
My father and I both bought our previous cars around the same time. Both were 4 cyl imports. I sold mine with 225,000 miles on the clock with no engine or tranny problems ever, still getting 30 MPG, and never burning a drop of oil. I changed my oil every 2000-3000 miles.
My father gave his to my brother-in-law and included the case of pennzoil in the trunk for adding a quart every 500 miles. He changed his oil every 5000 miles and drove MUCH easier than did I.
Obviously this is not *proof* but it did factor into my decision that more frequent oil changes are indeed good for the car in the long run.
Additionally, and ironically, Dad always used Pennzoil, a favorite around here, and i always used Valvoline or Napa branded valvoline, an often bad-mouthed oil around here
Having said all that, if you are leasing a car and only plan to keep it 3 years, you might as well just follow the needed OCI to keep it in warranty.