jac04
Well-Known Member
I heard GM was changing their recommendation from sawdust to oatmeal.It's still just putting sawdust in that gearbox ...
Sponsored
I heard GM was changing their recommendation from sawdust to oatmeal.It's still just putting sawdust in that gearbox ...
I wish it was possible to make clear to the Jeep community that the 3.6 in our Jeeps, and 2018+ Wranglers, isn't the same engine. It's a 3.6, looks the same, some parts interchange, but it's a very different design in so many ways.The 2012 3.6 was not the same 3.6 as used in current Jeeps, it was the Classic Pentastar (no Variable Valve Lift). It was designed with 5w30 oil specified, and then switched to 5w20 around the '12 or '13 model year. The Pentastar Upgrade engine has always had 0w20 oil specified, it has many differences from the Classic Pentastar. The switch in the Classic Pentastar to 5w20 oil was for CAFE standards, but the PUG was designed from the start for 0w20.
Great, now we'll have mice fighting to get into the engines! That's going to be a sticky mess changing that out.I heard GM was changing their recommendation from sawdust to oatmeal.
Man that right thereThe 2012 3.6 was not the same 3.6 as used in current Jeeps, it was the Classic Pentastar (no Variable Valve Lift). It was designed with 5w30 oil specified, and then switched to 5w20 around the '12 or '13 model year. The Pentastar Upgrade engine has always had 0w20 oil specified, it has many differences from the Classic Pentastar. The switch in the Classic Pentastar to 5w20 oil was for CAFE standards, but the PUG was designed from the start for 0w20.
A healthy choiceI heard GM was changing their recommendation from sawdust to oatmeal.
We've both been saying this in almost every oil thread, over and over, but it never takes. A Youtube comes along and "but...but...but...but.... GM, or what about this!" and facts be damned.Man that right thereis the definitive statement , moderator mark this for all to see and close the thread
![]()
Very well said
My first Jeep (2023) and if it isn’t a good one, I intend to trade it off for something other than a Jeep product. That said, the majority run a long time without issues so we shall see.I just had the intake cam (cylinder 6 side), rockers, and lifters replaced on a 2022 JT with 24500 miles on it. Oil and filter changes every 5k to 6k with mopar filter & penzoil 0w20 full syn. Took about two months to source parts at the dealership (FCA case opened as well to speed it up).
Coming from vehicles with +100k miles with not a single wrench touching their engines, it sounded insane to require engine work at such low miles.
On one hand, it gives comfort learning that the issue seems limited to one intake cam (based on many posts that I've seen so far). On another hand, there's uncertainly if this will turn into a maintenance item every 25k miles.
At this point the idea of parting out with the truck is being entertained, despite how much i really like this gladiator. oh well.
So based on the first and only Jeep?My first Jeep (2023) and if it isn’t a good one, I intend to trade it off for something other than a Jeep product. That said, the majority run a long time without issues so we shall see.
What they want to do and what they know the fix is are two different things. The fix is to rebuild or replace all affected engines. What they want to do is spread it out over a lot of time, buy time, push some people out a ways so the failure happens next fall, not this summer.Just had a low mileage 23 suburban towed in today, catastrophic failure. Replace engine, refill with 0w20. I don’t believe GM has a clue on what to do, this is going to be a bad one.
I do believe the 0w40 is a bandaid for sure.GM is the guy behind the curtain, who when someone catches a glim
Exactly. That's what I said in another one of these threads.
Leave the ones before and after the affected dates alone (proving it wasn't an oil issue) and once the engine is replaced, go back to the book and put the prior cap back on.
Again proving it was simply a bandaid on an artery, not a fix - otherwise they'd make it a change and keep it that way.