JASinIL2006
Vice Admiral
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2012
- Messages
- 5,673
Plants, algae, plankton.Do you guys really believe that stuff came from decomposed dinosaurs? Or vegetation?
Plants, algae, plankton.Do you guys really believe that stuff came from decomposed dinosaurs? Or vegetation?
I don't think they made any money on the deal.
Yeah, I just wait for the change oil message too in my f150. It does seem to go a long time between changes though, like about 12-13,000 km. I figure if that is calibrated for reg oil and I use synthetic, I should be good. However, there is one ford repair YT channel I like that says ford's service intervals are way too long, so IDK.I just wait for the Oil Monitor Light to come on, or if equipped, the Oil Life% to hit 0, with certain Caveats.
The car with the Change Oil Light was speced for Dino Oil, and it goes a long time. Since I have always used Syn, I go a few extra thousand before changing, it now has over 300,000 on it, and doesn't burn it, leaks a bit.
The Car with the % reading, would initially go about 10,000 between changes, but because the DI engine was creating abrasive Soot and was ruining the Timing Chains, GM reprogramed the Oil Life Monitor to shorter intervals. In cooler temps, a trip around the Block would drop the Life by 1%, so I ignored it and added a few extra thousand before changing it. At 9 yrs GM replaced the Chains under warranty. Drove the Car another 5 yrs before it was written off due to a Collision, and it didn't burn oil, at 200,000
I remember that saga - ironically Mobil has been doing LV taxi testing for many years (Proof of Performance) …I do try to follow exactly what the OEM says to use, especially during warrantee, the one time it became confusing was when there was a spat (or so it seemed) between FCA and Mobil. At one time Mobil 1 had full approval in Chrysler products but that changed when Fiat bought into them, Fiat was allied with Shell/Penzoil. Mobil apparently didn't want to do some very extensive test on Mobil 1 to get the Chrysler MS 6395 certification, so technically the cheaper Mobil was still approved but not Mobil 1. I had started using it in my '07 Jeep Hemi back in '09 and only found out about this a few years after.
this is a cut and paste from the extensive requirements of this standard:
Oil must pass Chrysler Las Vegas fleet test. The test is run in Chrysler vehicles for 100,000 miles in taxicabs in Las Vegas over two summers and one winter. Chrysler material engineering can supply more detail. Fleet plan must be approved by Chrysler’s Material Engineering before testing begins.
But just kept using it and it worked out just fine. Now apparently the Mobil 1 advanced full synthetic version meets this spec so I guess ChryCo and whoever owns them & Mobil made up after their little spat.