Originally Posted by Smokescreen
Originally Posted by caprice_2nv
Originally Posted by Smokescreen
Wow...being PUP (backed by 15 year/500,000 mile lubrication limited warranty) one would think that BITOG-ers OCI would shun and push past the 5K barrier that is propagated by iffy-lube shops....I guess not.
So you only consider miles travelled and not time or driving conditions?
5000 miles is basic conventional oil realm, not PUP. Do you have an OLM? What does it say? Have you performed a UOA that has directed you to go shorter OCI?
I've seen lots of vehicles with driving habits or conditions that limit then to 3000 miles. Don't group everyone under the same umbrella.
Example 1: my cars are both carbureted and doing 5 mile round trips to work 5 days a week. In the winter that includes many sub zero cold starts and warming up to scrape the windows.
Example 2: my girlfriend's Hyundai sonata. It does the same type of commute to work as mine plus has GDI and the oil was looking terrible and smelling of fuel after the 3k miles that she used to go (6-7 months for her).
Example 3: my work truck is a 2005 Silverado. The oil life monitor goes to about 4k miles in the summer and almost down to 3k miles in the winter. (I do construction layout for a land surveyor and the truck does lots of idle time).
Those are just the quickest ones that come to mind for me.
Originally Posted by caprice_2nv
Originally Posted by Smokescreen
Wow...being PUP (backed by 15 year/500,000 mile lubrication limited warranty) one would think that BITOG-ers OCI would shun and push past the 5K barrier that is propagated by iffy-lube shops....I guess not.
So you only consider miles travelled and not time or driving conditions?
5000 miles is basic conventional oil realm, not PUP. Do you have an OLM? What does it say? Have you performed a UOA that has directed you to go shorter OCI?
I've seen lots of vehicles with driving habits or conditions that limit then to 3000 miles. Don't group everyone under the same umbrella.
Example 1: my cars are both carbureted and doing 5 mile round trips to work 5 days a week. In the winter that includes many sub zero cold starts and warming up to scrape the windows.
Example 2: my girlfriend's Hyundai sonata. It does the same type of commute to work as mine plus has GDI and the oil was looking terrible and smelling of fuel after the 3k miles that she used to go (6-7 months for her).
Example 3: my work truck is a 2005 Silverado. The oil life monitor goes to about 4k miles in the summer and almost down to 3k miles in the winter. (I do construction layout for a land surveyor and the truck does lots of idle time).
Those are just the quickest ones that come to mind for me.
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