โAug-19-2017 12:22 PM
โAug-23-2017 09:14 AM
spoon059 wrote:Lynnmor wrote:
How about that! Now try to learn that Diesel Exhaust Fluid has NOTHING to do with regens. It is injected into the exhaust to reduce NOx. The extra fuel is used to burn out the DPF. Oh, and welcome to the condescending club.
Before Cummins introduced DEF into the exhaust system, the way they reduced nitrous oxides was with use of the EGR. The EGR routed a lot of exhaust gas back into the engine to reduce the total nitrous oxides coming out of the tail pipe. That caused the oil to get very dirty, very quickly. As a result of the very dirty conditions, it required shorter oil change intervals.
In 2013 Cummins introduced DEF as a means to reduce nitrous oxides in the exhaust. Using DEF to reduce those nitrous oxides resulted in substantially less involvement from the EGR valve, which meant less exhaust gases going back into the combustion chamber, which meant the oil wasn't getting as dirty nearly as quickly. As a result of cleaner conditions, it allowed longer oil change intervals.
Hopefully I don't get a nomination into the "condescension club", and hopefully you understand the argument that several people are making.
Yes, technically the DEF has absolutely nothing to do with the engine oil, but the technology of DEF has a direct impact on the EGR, which has a direct impact on engine oil.
โAug-23-2017 08:32 AM
โAug-21-2017 06:10 PM
Lynnmor wrote:
How about that! Now try to learn that Diesel Exhaust Fluid has NOTHING to do with regens. It is injected into the exhaust to reduce NOx. The extra fuel is used to burn out the DPF. Oh, and welcome to the condescending club.
โAug-21-2017 03:40 PM
Lynnmor wrote:Learjet wrote:Lynnmor wrote:Grit dog wrote:Lynnmor wrote:Me Again wrote:Lynnmor wrote:
DEF really has nothing to do with oil. My DEF equipped truck OLM usually calls for an oil change around 7000 miles.
Yours in not a RAM!!!! Non DEF RAM 6.7's had super short oil change calls on the EVIC. Chris
OK, so tell us all what happens when your RAM truck squirts DEF in the exhaust system that has an effect on the oil in the engine. :h
Nice attempt at being snarky when you don't know what you're talking about........
So I ask how the DEF has an effect on motor oil (it doesn't) and, instead of coming up with an intelligent answer, you have nothing to add but a condescending remark. Sad but typical.
Sir, he was correct...The pre-DEF Rams had lots of Regens going on...that causes extra fuel in the cylinders post ignition which causes fuel to wash down the cylinders and mix with the oil. You might want to do some reading before you are quick to dismiss the info.
How about that! Now try to learn that Diesel Exhaust Fluid has NOTHING to do with regens. It is injected into the exhaust to reduce NOx. The extra fuel is used to burn out the DPF. Oh, and welcome to the condescending club.
โAug-21-2017 02:52 PM
Me Again wrote:x2.M.R.E. wrote:That is not what your owners manual states!. It says which ever occurs first. 15k, 6 months, or oil minder.
I have a '16 Ram 2500. I changed oil at 6 mo 3000 miles and 1 year at 9500 miles. Asked the service Rep if I have to change every 6 months for warranty. He said no, just follow the oil monitor but change at least once a year.
โAug-21-2017 11:20 AM
Grit dog wrote:
^Let me explain this as I would to my son before he learned that everything isn't 100% literal. He grew out of that a couple years ago.
Yes you're correct, DEF never touches the engine nor is it used in an active regen.
What it does is allow for less regens which in turn lessens fuel dilution by way of not injecting extra fuel to raise egts. (Except systems like GMs I believe that use an additional fuel injector downstream of the engine ) Also the newer technology has allowed for less egr action which keeps oil cleaner as well.
BTW if you weren't being sarcastic you wouldn't have stated the "question" as you did followed by the little scratchy head emoji.
So from my 9 year olds perspective, yes def is not involved in regens. From an informed perspective, def is beneficial in multiple ways to the Diesel engine emissions system.
โAug-21-2017 08:13 AM
โAug-21-2017 07:47 AM
Learjet wrote:Lynnmor wrote:Grit dog wrote:Lynnmor wrote:Me Again wrote:Lynnmor wrote:
DEF really has nothing to do with oil. My DEF equipped truck OLM usually calls for an oil change around 7000 miles.
Yours in not a RAM!!!! Non DEF RAM 6.7's had super short oil change calls on the EVIC. Chris
OK, so tell us all what happens when your RAM truck squirts DEF in the exhaust system that has an effect on the oil in the engine. :h
Nice attempt at being snarky when you don't know what you're talking about........
So I ask how the DEF has an effect on motor oil (it doesn't) and, instead of coming up with an intelligent answer, you have nothing to add but a condescending remark. Sad but typical.
Sir, he was correct...The pre-DEF Rams had lots of Regens going on...that causes extra fuel in the cylinders post ignition which causes fuel to wash down the cylinders and mix with the oil. You might want to do some reading before you are quick to dismiss the info.
โAug-20-2017 09:01 PM
โAug-20-2017 06:35 PM
โAug-20-2017 06:33 PM
Grit dog wrote:Durb wrote:naturist wrote:
I'm used to 10,000 mile oil changes on full synthetic oil in a 2001 VW Jetta turbo-diesel, and 12,500 mile OCI on a 2005 Jeep Libby turbo-diesel on full synthetic, and 13,000 mile on a BMW. The last of these has an oil change sensor which is indeed sensitive to whether I'm towing. All three require full synthetic oil for the turbo, and I bet the OP's RAM would also need it for the same reasons. There is, in fact evidence that changing such oil early INCREASES wear. So do what the mfg says to do. Do NOT stick with the 3-5,000 intervals just because you have done that in the past.
I'm curious, what evidence is there that clean oil increases wear over dirty oil? I can see 15,000 and 30,000 mile oil change intervals if you are running a bypass filter to filter the dirt out. High flow oil filters with internal bypass are not up to the job. In my opinion, with the new oils breakdown is not the problem but suspended micro particles are wearing down the internals of an engine. I will continue with short change intervals on my older Cummins. I figure that if dirty oil is superior to clean oil then Ram would ship their new trucks with dirty oil.
Omfg I've heard it all now! Clean oil causes more wear? Lol. Change your oil too much, blow up the engine!
Now I know why I read this site everyday.......pure, free entertainment!
โAug-20-2017 06:00 PM
Durb wrote:
I'm curious, what evidence is there that clean oil increases wear over dirty oil? I can see 15,000 and 30,000 mile oil change intervals if you are running a bypass filter to filter the dirt out. High flow oil filters with internal bypass are not up to the job. In my opinion, with the new oils breakdown is not the problem but suspended micro particles are wearing down the internals of an engine. I will continue with short change intervals on my older Cummins. I figure that if dirty oil is superior to clean oil then Ram would ship their new trucks with dirty oil.
โAug-20-2017 05:40 PM
Lynnmor wrote:Grit dog wrote:Lynnmor wrote:Me Again wrote:Lynnmor wrote:
DEF really has nothing to do with oil. My DEF equipped truck OLM usually calls for an oil change around 7000 miles.
Yours in not a RAM!!!! Non DEF RAM 6.7's had super short oil change calls on the EVIC. Chris
OK, so tell us all what happens when your RAM truck squirts DEF in the exhaust system that has an effect on the oil in the engine. :h
Nice attempt at being snarky when you don't know what you're talking about........
So I ask how the DEF has an effect on motor oil (it doesn't) and, instead of coming up with an intelligent answer, you have nothing to add but a condescending remark. Sad but typical.
โAug-20-2017 04:01 PM
M.R.E. wrote:
I have a '16 Ram 2500. I changed oil at 6 mo 3000 miles and 1 year at 9500 miles. Asked the service Rep if I have to change every 6 months for warranty. He said no, just follow the oil monitor but change at least once a year.
โAug-20-2017 03:05 PM