hahahahahahahahaOriginally posted by: biggiesmallz
Anyone know the reason that we have to change oil every 3000 miles.
It will always lubricate because it's oil so why do we have to change it?
You just go on believing that.
hahahahahahahahaOriginally posted by: biggiesmallz
Anyone know the reason that we have to change oil every 3000 miles.
It will always lubricate because it's oil so why do we have to change it?
Originally posted by: Eli
hahahahahahahahaOriginally posted by: biggiesmallz
Anyone know the reason that we have to change oil every 3000 miles.
It will always lubricate because it's oil so why do we have to change it?
You just go on believing that.
Link?Originally posted by: JEDI
consumer reports did a report a few years ago about oil changes. they tested it on nyc taxis.
they took apart the engines in a fleet of cabs. they measured and weighed everything.
5w30, 10w30,10w40, synthetic, quaker, valvoline, some at 3000 mile changes, some at 7500, etc
2millions miles later and there was like .02% difference between all of them.
so i'm sticking with 7500 at walmart for $13
screw u jiffy lube and $25 every 3000 miles.
yes, it it bush's fault![]()
Originally posted by: Eli
Link?Originally posted by: JEDI
consumer reports did a report a few years ago about oil changes. they tested it on nyc taxis.
they took apart the engines in a fleet of cabs. they measured and weighed everything.
5w30, 10w30,10w40, synthetic, quaker, valvoline, some at 3000 mile changes, some at 7500, etc
2millions miles later and there was like .02% difference between all of them.
so i'm sticking with 7500 at walmart for $13
screw u jiffy lube and $25 every 3000 miles.
yes, it it bush's fault![]()
The bad thing about tests like that is - Do you drive a taxicab? Does your car have the same engine as a taxicab?
No? Then the results for you may not be the same.It is true that taxis see severe service, though. It is a different kind of severe service than most regular users will see, however. That could make all the difference in the world.
The real reason for the 3,000 mile oil change is cheap insurance.
Ornery I think has posted a link that had a lot of info from the CR report. They didn't get much done with synthetics because unrelated to the oil some of their test engines died. The important thing they noted though was that there was no significant difference in engine break down between cars that had gone 6000 and those that had gone 3000 miles. Since these were NYC cabs, their driving was basically all stop and go AND of great note is that cabs idle frequently, so 6000 miles on a car in those conditions was proven to do as well as 3000.Originally posted by: C'DaleRider
Originally posted by: Eli
Link?Originally posted by: JEDI
consumer reports did a report a few years ago about oil changes. they tested it on nyc taxis.
they took apart the engines in a fleet of cabs. they measured and weighed everything.
5w30, 10w30,10w40, synthetic, quaker, valvoline, some at 3000 mile changes, some at 7500, etc
2millions miles later and there was like .02% difference between all of them.
so i'm sticking with 7500 at walmart for $13
screw u jiffy lube and $25 every 3000 miles.
yes, it it bush's fault![]()
The bad thing about tests like that is - Do you drive a taxicab? Does your car have the same engine as a taxicab?
No? Then the results for you may not be the same.It is true that taxis see severe service, though. It is a different kind of severe service than most regular users will see, however. That could make all the difference in the world.
The real reason for the 3,000 mile oil change is cheap insurance.
I remember that test and it was more than just a few years ago.....and you won't get a link to the report, Eli for a couple of reasons. The CR website is subscription only and that report has not been put into the site's archives. What I do remember from the test is that they wanted VERY severe duty cycles from driving over the same "courses", so NYC taxis were an excellent choice. They used the same group of drivers in several cars....each, as mentioned, torn down for wieghing of parts, then used for a specific period of time, then reweighed and inspected. The same group of drivers was used, as were the same make/model of car, to remove as many variables as possible.
I do remember the WORST oil they found was Quaker State.......sludged faster than any other brand. Seems to me that Castrol GTX and Valvoline were at the otehr/upper end of protection.
Gotta hand it to CR sometimes.......very few other publications are willing to invest the time needed for some sorts of testing. Take for instance the case of refrigerating batteries to preserve their life before using them. Everyone's heard of doing it.....so CR spent over 5 years exploring that. Hundreds of batteries, alkaline, heavy duty, etc., and many brands were urchased at retail. They then were split in half....half stored in a refrigerator, half on a room shelf at room temp. Over the next 5 years, the two groups of batteries were periodically tested for charge remaining and the conclusion was there's no benefit to refrigerating batteries to preserve their life. The difference was within the margin of error of the battery testing machines.
