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AAmco said i might need a transmission which would start at $900.00 to 1500.00. my car is 94 cougar with 67,000 miles but the odometer stopped working almost a year ago. the car has several minor things that is needed (sway bar, tire rod, upper and lower control arm, passenger power window is going out). know needed done.
i don't know if i want to invest alot of stuff in this car and it will keep breaking on me since i don't have that kind of money to waste.
i'm thinking about looking at the hyudai accent, ion saturn 3, kia rio next week.
I have a manual corolla S that is nearing its first oil change. Traditionally, I've always owned rather high mileage vehicles and I'd change my own oil. That being said, I have a few questions I'm hoping someone can help me with:
(1) I'm gathering that on these new engines, full synthetic is better for gas mileage and in general. Any suggestions as to which one? I drive about 90% city mileage by downtown Tampa, FL.
(2) How much should an oil change and tire rotation cost, with full synthetic?
(3) If I choose to do the oil change myself, does anyone know how to turn off the engine maintenance light that I believe will soon turn on?
Thanks. I prefer to chnage my own oil, but since I now live in an apartment with no garage it's difficult. I really do miss the country...
2. A full synthetic change will run you about $50 commercially, and about the same for a tire rotation.
3. Check the manual. I think that it is something like press and hold the odometer reset button as you turn the ignition on. It is in the manual for sure.
Tell me, that $22 oil, is that dino or synthetic?
Dino 5 quart jugs are as low as $8-15 at WallyWorld.
You are welcome.
Price varies, the other nearby VW dealer wanted $120 for the same service.
either way, 30 is still disappointing since I purposely drive like a friggin snail...
thanks for all your help, however.
The 5W-30 would work perhaps just as well.
Thanks for the advice.
But one last question: when I go to get an oil change, can I bring the oil and filter? and watch as they rotate the tires? thanks, since I've never actually paid someone to change my oil and I'm actually rather nervous for some odd reason. I may just go ahead and do it myself, I dunno...
Well, if you do want to save fuel you want to carry as much speed in turn as possible.
Krzys
I've been racking my brains as to what the issue can be. The best thing I can think of is that I only drive about two to five miles at a time, so the engine really doesn't have a chance to warm up and get going.
When the car was brand new, it got 40 mpg driving with two people and two suitcases at 75-80 mph on cruise control.
That's exactly what the problem is; short trips which allow little or no opportunity for the engine to reach operating temperature will simply kill fuel mileage.
thanks for your input, however.
CU's overall mileage, mpg 29
CU's city/highway, mpg 20/39
CU's 150-mile trip, mpg 35
Please note that you are getting closer to Consumer Report's overall mileage, than their city figure.
For people in citys with more freely flowing traffic, I think the EPA city number is more accurate. Driving in non-congested suburban type of area, we generally get around halfway between EPA city and highway numbers in our daily commutes.
I know this is the oil forum and not the mpg forum, so this'll be my last post on this topic: i drove about 50 miles, highway, with cruise control on 65-70 much of the time, as well as about five miles congested.
averaged 39.9 miles per gallon, with about 300 pounds of passenger and luggage.
so at least I know it's the short city driving that's draggin the mileage down.
I took a peek at the oil, however, and it does seem as if the city driving is rough on it.
thanks for your input. I'm going to put syn in from now on and not take chances.
FWIW, I cannot think of a singly reason why the air filter would have anything at all to do with how well synthetic oil performs in a car.
Best Regards,
Shipo
2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,
Seeing is believing. I saw an Audi stagger into my friend's shop--he saw the "Fairview" oil filter or whatever it was, swapped it out and bingo, car ran fine.
If the specifications manual ok's use on a certain car, absent an unannounced running change by the manufacturer of the car, it will work, the liability is too great to advertise that a filter will work when it won't. What might have happened, is mounting a filter that "looked" like the right size, but wasn't designed for that application (the Audi). And yes, that can lead to problems.
On an unrelated note, the new displacement on demand systems in new cars (use oil pressure to activate/deactivate some of the combustion cylinders) are reportedly very sensitive to the oil thickness - so using the recommended viscoscity is mandatory, not optional - for those who like to put 20-50 or 10-40 in everything, this will create problems.
Which non OEM filters screw up and which don't, I don't know.
Best Regards,
Shipo
See, at some point last year I wasn't paying attention and bought a case of SAE 30 instead of 5w-30.....