Posted on 03/05/2024 10:50:24 AM PST by TNoldman
This is helpful! :)
I just had this conversation yesterday morning at my toyota dealer getting my Highlander’s first 5,000 mile checkup.
Turbo. Towing. NO OIL CHANGE UNTIL 10,000 miles, it uses synthetic oil, they told me.
Service manual doesn’t specify synthetic, SFAICT.
Ford Bookmark
I have a 2016 Escape Titanium. I love the car.
Do these new recommendations apply to my car?
I watch a Youtube guy that disassembles engines with problems. Almost ALL are oil related and mainly related to owner not changing the oil. No reason an engine will not get 250k or more with proper care.
I have a 2016 Escape Titanium. I love the car.
Do these new recommendations apply to my car?
Yes!!!
I just had this conversation yesterday morning at my toyota dealer getting my Highlander’s first 5,000 mile checkup.
Turbo. Towing. NO OIL CHANGE UNTIL 10,000 miles, it uses synthetic oil, they told me.
Service manual doesn’t specify synthetic, SFAICT.
You have a Turbo and you use at for Towing you should follow my recommendations. 100000 miles would be 26 oil changes or about $1200. Your dealer recommendation would save you about $400. No Thank you.
I also used to work in a machine shop, rebuilding engines, but I seem to recall that one was not supposed to use synthetic on a new engine - in order to allow the rings to seat.
I use Mobil 1 currently, but with my experiences with synthetic - it is very very good.
...that is, good enough to prevent the rings from seating...maybe I'm wrong, and yes, I would defer to your opinion on the subject Mr. Engineer!
Quieted it so much you had to look at the tach to see if it was running.
Changed the PTU oil at around 20,000 miles to Amsoil Severe Gear and wish I had done it sooner.
The oil when drained was like black tar.
After changing, the fuel economy went up 7 MPG. Amsoil.com
This was true 40 years or so ago, depending on what rings you happened to get in an engine.
Around 40-50 years ago, Sealed Power Corporation developed pre-lapped, radiused rings.
It took several years to license most or all of the other ring manufacturers to make them.
Since that era, to the best of my knowledge, no break in is required as all new engines should have rings made that way.
Working in a machine shop though, you might encounter straight edged rings that would require break in to seat.
Amsoil has a break in oil just for this: Amsoil Break in oil
Thanks FRiend! The machine shop was 40+ years ago ;)
I’ve owned three Fords. All were pieces of garbage. Never bought another one and don’t see myself ever owning another one. It seems every few weeks Ford is having another recall. No thanks.
Rotella T6 and send it.
I’m over 25 years away from my experience with GM’s Gen 3 V-8 program. (I was project engineer for the CMM process control installations at Romulus.) Even then the mfg guys were saying that GM was complying with EPA regulations “by engineering the spec sheets”. The thing that was killing them in 1994 was a diktat that the engine must use very thin oil (5W-30?) to reduce oil drag. All well and good, except the machine tool builders couldn’t hold tolerances tightly enough to avoid a high infant mortality rate. 25 years more of this, and I surmise that the current powertrain generations are on the ragged edge of failure unless preventive maintenance protocols are rigidly followed, (at not inconsiderable expense). I for one wouldn’t even consider a turbo-charged engine as a daily driver.
I have a 2009 F-150 SuperCab 4.6 V8 with almost 339,000 miles (yes 339K) on it. Still looks and drives like new. Just regular maintenance. Interior is excellent, no tears. Only major changes are the addition of nerf bar running boards and upgrading the audio system to include wireless apple CarPlay.
I understand how your feel. I sorry you had problems with your Ford Vehicles.
Sorry for the Typos and auto correct. Wish FR had “edit” Function.
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