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Engine Additives
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If you plan on putting several hundred thousand miles on a car, synthetic will make quite a bit of a difference. I own two cars. A '66 Chevy Bel-Air and a '98 Intrepid. The Chevy is an old junker that I use to drive back and forth to work. I only plan to keep it a couple more years, so it gets an oil and filter change once a year, and it gets crude. The Intrepid, on the other hand, was purchased new, and we plan on keeping it for quite some time. I want nothing but the best engine protection for the Intrepid, so it gets synthetic. If you want the absolute best protection for your engine, use synthetic. It will make difference in the long run.
What should be my maintainance schedule
What precautions I should take to prolong the life of the van.
All help will be appreciated
-disconnect the battery so you stop it from discharging
-get an oil change roughly every 3-5 months
-(personal idea) I think the gas tank shouldn't be full but at least halfway. I don't know what the coeff. of thermal expansion for gas is so I don't know if this is a moot point or not
Sorry, my Bel-Air is a 4 door.
shekharpatel
Look at the maintenance section of your owner's manual. It should have two maintenance schedules, schedule A and Schedule B. One of them will require more frequent maintenance. For example, schedule A may require that you change your oil and filter every 3,000 miles, whereas schedule B may require you to change your oil and filter every 7,500 miles. Look at the schedule that recommends the most frequent maintenance, and if any of your driving conditions match any of the driving conditions listed in this schedule, follow it. If not, follow the less restrictive schedule. These schedules make determining when something needs to be done very easy. Follow them and you'll get the most out of your vehicle.
i agree though. no more than 4 months for dino juice, you can probably safely go a year with syn. that's my schedule on my pickup truck.
-Chris
of miracles if you use their particular product.
Has anybody actually used these and are they worth
it.I figure if it worked it would not have to be
advertised but word of mouth would sell it.
Anybody want to drain their oil and test these?
I work as a firefighter and addressed this oil change interval to our apparatus coordinator who schedules the preventive maintenance on our fleet of apparatus. I was informed that our city maintenance garage conducts oil quality surveys periodically from various city vehicles that range from police cars, fire engines, and sanitation trucks. These oil analysis are performed more frequently on the larger diesel engines versus the smaller gas engines such as in pick ups and police cars. Anyway, to make a long story short they discovered that the engine oil on the gas engines was only slightly contaminated in the range of 20%-30% capacity of deposits. At the 7,500 mile mark the oil was still around 50%-60% contaminated. The way the contamination level was explained to me was that oil can maintain it's lubricating, anti foaming, and detergent qualities only for so long and these properties become less effective as the by products of combustion are absorbed by the detergents in the oil.
So why do we change our oil at 3,000 mile intervals when even at 7,500 miles or more the engine oil is not yet fully saturated with harmful contaminants, only 50%-60% saturation.
I was informed that an engine oil analysis is not that expensive and most large diesel engine repair facilities offer this service. It will also inform you of any abnormal engine wear problems, or contamination of fuel and engine coolant in the system.
Further, numerous owners manuals state to change the oil filter every other change, yet any person who can open the hood knows that if you keep the old filter, you will place one quart of dirty oil back in your engine, while cranking your starter, before the engine starts. This is one recommendation where I just have a problem believing that "the manufacturer knows best." The manufacturer does know that they want you to buy another car from them ASAP. One way to accelerate the process is to have you keep one quart of old oil .....................
sulfur is a common impurity in gasoline. one byproduct of combustion of hydrocarbons is H20 - water. so, i'd expect some sulfuric acid floating around in there.
is that a good guess? anyone?
Bob
http://cjsupra.kendra.com/oil-spec.html#3DPlot
Well, one service trip the shop decided on their own to change my oil ( without me asking ) since it was part of the contract. Not one to waste an oil change, I did the 3000 miles with the "normal" oil. It was the worst 3000 miles I drove with the truck. I got home from the trip, got rid of that crap, and put Mobil1 back in, and again I had the smoothest running truck.
Scientific, not at all. Real world experience.
My .02
The Valvoline full synthetic oil that is recommended by Lotus which I put in the transaxle had an unexpected benefit. After taking out the natural oil which the previous BMW dealer had put in and using the synthetic, the half shaft seals which had been leaking, stopped leaking.
I have also had experience with natural oils in my plant compressors foaming and causing eventual failure. Synthetics will not foam. I also did the test you see with Mobil 1 against the Valvoline and Castrol synthetics. All of these were better than the natural oil. The Mobil 1 smoked and darkened. The other two smoked but retained their light yellow color. I was impressed. I had read a letter in R&T that some people had been having problems in BMW's with the Castrol synthetic which has a 5W rating. Is there anyone out there who can confirm this problem?
assuming similar ambient temps, I would start the cold tractor, warm it up at 1200 rpm for 10 minutes.
Then drive it in high range wide open at 2500 rpm the 1.2 miles to a pretty steep hill I have on my road, then climb the hill in high range with the pedal depressed as far as I could without the rpm dropping below 1500 rpm.Back down the hill, and repeat the climb three times. Measure the
temperature of the HST line at the input side of the oil cooler with an infrared thermometer with a laser spotting sight at the top of the hill after the third ascent. Do the whole thing twice and average the temps.
Here's what I got: With Conventional lubricants, the temperature was 146 degrees. With
Amsoil synthetic, the temperature was 127 degrees. The ambient temperature was 7 degrees warmer when I tested the synthetic. Draw your own conclusions,
if you have any desire to. I've drawn my own and am keeping them to myself so no one has anything to argue with me about.
I'm not an AMSOIL person, just one satified customer.
Harry
has anybody tried it???
thanks,
lee
ask LURD about this stuff. he'll be able to
answer your question.
red
Some things to consider though:
1. Make VERY sure the oil you get is SAE SJ-rated. Using anything less will void your engine warranty if your car suffers an oil-related engine problem.
2. Try to get an oil with a decent temperature range. I'd recommend at minimum 5W-30 rating, especially for today's small cars with their hotter-running engines. I should know--my Honda Civic HX CVT coupe runs quite warm.
3. Try to get the best brand of oil you can afford. I've used Quaker State "Clearbase" 5W-30 SJ oil with pretty good results.
I myself will stay with the big brands, mostly because the better brands tend to have most consistent quality oil, especially on a car that revs around 2900-3300 rpm in freeway driving. Also, it's because I can get Quaker State and Pennzoil most everywhere. ;-)
But, the single, low volume station, "Harry's Cheap Gas" located at the end of the dirt road since 1948, I might be hesitant to buy gas for my new car. My 1948 tractor, however, might be different (LOL).
I read an early independant test of Mobil 1 and the distance interval limit was based on the build up of combustion particles in the oil and not on the breakdown of the oil. It was also stated that when a special fine oil filter is used the interval can be extended up to 60,000 miles. The summary said that it is far better to use a high quality synthetic oil changed infrequently than to use a conventional oil that is changed regularly.
I get the feeling that this 3000 mile idea is designed to rip off car owners.
I think this has been addressed before. A dealer cannot void your warranty based on the grounds that you cannot provide service records of every oil change and routine maintenance. I have had major transmission and engine work done under warranty and a dealer never asked me to provide proof that all scheduled maintenance had been completed.
Bob
I have never seen it written that all service records need to be provided in order to qualify for warranty work.
Now,you can read that any way you want.
Also,if you have a extended service contract,you will find a phrase included in it,stating:
It is required that verifiable reciepts be retained for the service work.Maintenance and/or service work reciepts may be requested.
I found this phrase in most of the major manufacturer's service contracts.
I kept a log on the truck I trdaded in, and the dealer was impressed that I had a history on the truck so they gave me more money for the trade in..since they knew that I took good care of the vechicle.
rob
Pat
Community Leader/Maintenance & Repair Conference
:-)
Pat
Community Leader/Maintenance & Repair Conference
Pat
Community Leader/Maintenance & Repair Conference