If she is wise and caught on to all of the above mentioned, you are now ready to add a boat to your repertoire!Mine caught on ......she thought it was odd that I was laying under the new jeep with only 1,000 miles on it.... LOL. Doesn't work as good as it would with my 20 year old F-250 with massive electrical issues.
I did my first at 2500ish just for piece of mind. Did my 2nd last weekend @ 8500ish because I finally had the time, the dealer had the oil and filter and my dash said I was @ 12-13%.My Jeep is currently at 1200 miles. Just trying to get an idea on when I should change my oil.
3k? or 5k? or more
Conventional can easily do 7K Not sure why people are still stuck on the "old-timers" thing from the 60s.For a motor running conventional oil, I agree with every 3-5K.
Agreed- I should've worded that differently: It makes more sense to me why people running conventional oil do shorter intervals (especially for those that are stuck in the "old-timers" frame of mind) when it comes to oil changes. I ran a parts store for about 4 years, and there are die hards that lose their mind if they push an odometer over 3K between oil changes. I personally haven't run conventional oil in a very long time, with the exception of the small block chevy motor in my 66 GMC. The only reason for that was that it had a lot of issues when I bought it (leaks, compression, low oil pressure, blah blah blah), and if I'm gonna piss money away on oil, it'll be cheap conventional oil. Just finishing up assembly on the new motor now, and it will go fully synthetic after break in.Conventional can easily do 7K Not sure why people are still stuck on the "old-timers" thing from the 60s.
Even decades ago it did, and today it's even better, far better, than it was in the 70s when 7,000-7,500 was a common recommendation.
It's the additive package that wear out more than the base oil. Additives wear down, depreciate, etc. If we could do it 45 years ago, we can sure do it now with the engines better sealed, the fuel so tightly controlled, no chokes to cause rich mixtures and fuel contamination in the crank case.........
The 4.0 in my SX4 I built, primed the oil system, installed the engine in the car, started it and drove it. I changed the first oil at about 1,000 miles as I recall and annually since then since I don't put many miles on it in a year (1,000-7,000 miles a year)Agreed- I should've worded that differently: It makes more sense to me why people running conventional oil do shorter intervals (especially for those that are stuck in the "old-timers" frame of mind) when it comes to oil changes. I ran a parts store for about 4 years, and there are die hards that lose their mind if they push an odometer over 3K between oil changes. I personally haven't run conventional oil in a very long time, with the exception of the small block chevy motor in my 66 GMC. The only reason for that was that it had a lot of issues when I bought it (leaks, compression, low oil pressure, blah blah blah), and if I'm gonna piss money away on oil, it'll be cheap conventional oil. Just finishing up assembly on the new motor now, and it will go fully synthetic after break in.
A crazy side note- my grandfather (he's 82) is a mechanic by trade, has turned wrenches for decades, and still does to this day. He's never bought ANYTHING new, especially cars. When I was a teenager with my first car, I could call him over the phone and he could damn near pin point my problem from states away. Obviously knows his stuff. He and I were talking recently and he told me that he hasn't done an oil change on any of his vehicles in decades, and has never once had an issue. I was shocked. He runs his cars and trucks 300K+ miles, and says oil changes are the biggest scam in the auto industry, once a motor is broken in, lol. I'm not adopting his ways, and he sure as hell ain't changing them at 82.
You need a Honey-Won’t do list. ? And a new garage Kevin.Doesn't help with my Honey-Do list.
I think she's caught on!
Kevin