BREAK-IN RECOMMENDATIONS
What's the feeling out there on breaking in a new car? If it is important, wouldn't that make buying any demo a real risk? Ditto for "new" cars with a 100 or so miles put on them by 25 test drivers seeing how fast it can accelerate off the line?
0
This discussion has been closed.
Comments
For higher performance cars, abuse at the outset could prove very costly later on. You mash the throttle on a Viper at 100 miles at you'll be installing another $15,000 engine real soon.
Also it is recommended to avoid hard braking during the first 300 miles. Some people perform their first oil change between 500 and 1500 miles. After 500 miles, you can head to the Expressway/Freeway/Interstate and gradually increase load in the engine.
Indeed, how the car is treated during those first couple of thousands of miles is critical and very often overlooked by new car owners. If the car is new, why should I drive it so carefully? Some claim...
IMO, this is the main justification to buy a new car. I like to keep my cars since new. An used car is a gamble. If the original owner broke in the car properly and observed the maintenance of the vehicle, welll you are in luck..but if the car was abused then don't rise your eyebrows at the sight of the first problems.
When buying a new car I avoid cars with more than 20 miles on the odo. Anything above that requires an explanation from the selling dealer and a good discount to go along with it
The recommended break in period is 1000 miles and 3000 for the first oil change.
Mike
I'd be more concerned about going that distance with high speed constant rpm miles on a new engine. I would still try to vary speeds as much as possible and not go long periods of time at one RPM.
People are sometimes too overly concerned about break-in on a new engine. Modern engines are beautifully machined and don't need babying. Just stay out of redline for the first 1,000 miles and, as suggested, vary your speeds for a few weeks and stick to the manufacturer's schedule--if anything, go to the minimum mileages for oil changes rather than maximum. Presume "severe service" conditions.
Thanks and happy 4th (except for the English forumers, of course).
Mike
However having said all of this, I wouldn't expect anyone to either use or not use syn on startup on the basis of what they read here. I have documented nothing and neither have you. Second hand anecdotal evidence is all we have cited.
Just thought I would pass that along for what it's worth.
Thanks for all the inputs. This is really a nice civil forum.
Mike
Many newer engines are being built with lower ring tension to achieve higher efficiencies, and don't require break in as did older engines to seat properly.
Having said all this, I still would never by a demo or a dealer's car. Too much potential for trouble.
racing engines are built to last what, a whole 500 miles? engines built for the consumer are built to last how long? sorry, but your theory is just that, theory.
In regard to autos that arrive with synth: Are you saying that the Corvette engine is manufactured differently than the Z28 engine, and therefore can run synthetic immediately, but the Z28 cannot? I thought they were the same block. Do you have some manufacturer's info that states that the block is different - honed or otherwise?
Have you ever heard or seen someone who ran synth immediately that failed to seat their rings properly? I myself have never heard of anyone that had that problem, but that doesn't mean it hasn't happened. I'd like to see some proof of your theory though. I always switch to long-drain synth at 5K - no point in using good synth right away when you're just going to drain it anyway.