โMar-16-2022 02:18 PM
โMar-21-2022 04:02 PM
time2roll wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:1/2 ton = rating x 80%
Never heard of 80% rule.
Ratings are always under the actual capabilities with a builtin margin.
3/4+ = rating / 80% ๐
โMar-21-2022 03:20 PM
Cummins12V98 wrote:1/2 ton = rating x 80%
Never heard of 80% rule.
Ratings are always under the actual capabilities with a builtin margin.
โMar-21-2022 02:57 PM
dodge guy wrote:
Here is another way of thinking about it!
Why is it when it comes to tow ratings most people say to never push the ratings and to only go 80%! Yet when it comes to maint most people want to push the interval to at or farther than what the manuf recommends.
Just curious!
โMar-21-2022 02:46 PM
โMar-21-2022 01:08 PM
dodge guy wrote:Mobile 1 says 15,000 miles and I still only go 10,000.
Here is another way of thinking about it!
Why is it when it comes to tow ratings most people say to never push the ratings and to only go 80%! Yet when it comes to maint most people want to push the interval to at or farther than what the manuf recommends.
Just curious!
โMar-21-2022 12:22 PM
โMar-21-2022 10:39 AM
BenK wrote:
That CR test with taxis doesn't have one critical cycle of us folks who are not taxis drivers
NY taxis are almost never shut off for more than the time to refuel. In some of those CR reports, there were some who didn't turn off to refuel.
Us non-taxis drivers shut off our engines over might.
That then has moisture drop out vapor to condense inside the engine
Plus the oil film flows off surfaces
To have parts go metal to metal on startup
The why synthetics with better film strength will take longer to flow off
The quality of the filters anti-Drain valve determines how much oil stays in the oil galleries. That helps prevent metal on metal starts
Why more and more oil OEM's are adding molybdenum, which plates metal surfaces
Moly on moly has a VERY low coefficient of friction
Arguable, but many articles report 40%-50%-60% of all wear of an engine
I'm of the opinion of changing engine oil regularly and before the manuals recommendation
โMar-21-2022 10:03 AM
โMar-20-2022 07:30 PM
โMar-20-2022 07:14 PM
ktmrfs wrote:jerem0621 wrote:mosseater wrote:
Many years ago, when Hector was still a pup, and folks still believed in silly things like objectivity, Consumer Reports did a pretty thorough test with NY city taxi cabs and oil changes. Sythetic was still a niche market then, but after running taxis for 100K miles on almost all readily available oil brands, they tore them down to inspect and measure. The conclusion was, as long as the oil was changed at the then-standard 3000 miles, it didn't matter if it was mobile one or PepBoys reclaimed oil. Their conclusion was to make sure you changed it. Take that info for what you paid for it.
That said, two things to keep in mind: Your truck may have an "extreme duty" PM schedule because you tow or haul (Ford dealer service manager told me even if you tow occasionally). Point two...I have zero doubt oil now is better than its ever been, so I have confidence that it's lubrication capabilities are up to the 5 or 10K mile task. But....that black stuff in oil, that makes it black? That's dirt. It aint food coloring. Contaminants are so named because they aren't supposed to be there. I have historically changed mine in my former sig pic F 150 because I ran the dog pee out of it when towing. It never went past 4000 miles without a change. For the cost of Motorcraft synthetic blend and a new filter, I'll eat the minimal cost difference to keep sleeping soundly at night with the new truck as well. When my odometer in my 7.3 gas engine in my new F-250 hits about 4000 miles, I'll be crawling under it again with my drain pan. Thats my 4 cents. Y'all can do as you wish. The cost of one oil change per year wouldn't make most of us even blink. I'd love to be in that club.
I Will be doing he exact same with my brand new 2022 Chevy. It's a turbo truck and I will be changing he oil at 4,000 mile intervals or when the OLM hit's 50%, whichever is first.
Oil is cheap, engine work is NOT.
Thanks!
Jeremiah
I've run one duramax 250K miles following the oil life indicator and still only uses 1/2 qt in 10K miles, and I've run 4 other vehicles over the 200K mile mark following mfg recomended oil and change schedule and again, non more than 1/2 qt between changes and Blackstone lab reports always has come back with high TBN and excellent condition on the oil. Change every 4K if you want but all your doing is paying extra $ to the oil companies.
โMar-20-2022 06:48 PM
jerem0621 wrote:mosseater wrote:
Many years ago, when Hector was still a pup, and folks still believed in silly things like objectivity, Consumer Reports did a pretty thorough test with NY city taxi cabs and oil changes. Sythetic was still a niche market then, but after running taxis for 100K miles on almost all readily available oil brands, they tore them down to inspect and measure. The conclusion was, as long as the oil was changed at the then-standard 3000 miles, it didn't matter if it was mobile one or PepBoys reclaimed oil. Their conclusion was to make sure you changed it. Take that info for what you paid for it.
That said, two things to keep in mind: Your truck may have an "extreme duty" PM schedule because you tow or haul (Ford dealer service manager told me even if you tow occasionally). Point two...I have zero doubt oil now is better than its ever been, so I have confidence that it's lubrication capabilities are up to the 5 or 10K mile task. But....that black stuff in oil, that makes it black? That's dirt. It aint food coloring. Contaminants are so named because they aren't supposed to be there. I have historically changed mine in my former sig pic F 150 because I ran the dog pee out of it when towing. It never went past 4000 miles without a change. For the cost of Motorcraft synthetic blend and a new filter, I'll eat the minimal cost difference to keep sleeping soundly at night with the new truck as well. When my odometer in my 7.3 gas engine in my new F-250 hits about 4000 miles, I'll be crawling under it again with my drain pan. Thats my 4 cents. Y'all can do as you wish. The cost of one oil change per year wouldn't make most of us even blink. I'd love to be in that club.
I Will be doing he exact same with my brand new 2022 Chevy. It's a turbo truck and I will be changing he oil at 4,000 mile intervals or when the OLM hit's 50%, whichever is first.
Oil is cheap, engine work is NOT.
Thanks!
Jeremiah
โMar-20-2022 09:28 AM
โMar-20-2022 06:13 AM
โMar-19-2022 10:28 AM
โMar-19-2022 10:20 AM
dodge guy wrote:mosseater wrote:
Many years ago, when Hector was still a pup, and folks still believed in silly things like objectivity, Consumer Reports did a pretty thorough test with NY city taxi cabs and oil changes. Sythetic was still a niche market then, but after running taxis for 100K miles on almost all readily available oil brands, they tore them down to inspect and measure. The conclusion was, as long as the oil was changed at the then-standard 3000 miles, it didn't matter if it was mobile one or PepBoys reclaimed oil. Their conclusion was to make sure you changed it. Take that info for what you paid for it.
That said, two things to keep in mind: Your truck may have an "extreme duty" PM schedule because you tow or haul (Ford dealer service manager told me even if you tow occasionally). Point two...I have zero doubt oil now is better than its ever been, so I have confidence that it's lubrication capabilities are up to the 5 or 10K mile task. But....that black stuff in oil, that makes it black? That's dirt. It aint food coloring. Contaminants are so named because they aren't supposed to be there. I have historically changed mine in my former sig pic F 150 because I ran the dog pee out of it when towing. It never went past 4000 miles without a change. For the cost of Motorcraft synthetic blend and a new filter, I'll eat the minimal cost difference to keep sleeping soundly at night with the new truck as well. When my odometer in my 7.3 gas engine in my new F-250 hits about 4000 miles, I'll be crawling under it again with my drain pan. Thats my 4 cents. Y'all can do as you wish. The cost of one oil change per year wouldn't make most of us even blink. I'd love to be in that club.
I agree, oil gets beat up pretty bad when towing.
Think about all the heat cycles and pressure itโs put through next time youโre climbing I70 in CO or any big climb!
And with thatโฆ..how many people change their transmission fluid regularly. I do my trans every 25-30k miles. When I had the Excursion even the rear diff got new fluid at the same intervals.
I also wonder how many people replace their brake fluid? This is a safety item and when towing (stopping) brake fluid gets very hot! Here again I change the fluid at every brake job, about 30-40k miles. On my class A it gets done about every 3 years.