Originally posted by Jackal1
Yea, they used to need a break in period.....and still do. If it`s an engine...it needs a break in period. Refer back to common sense once again. If you choose not to....hey.....you certainly wouldn`t be the first not to know to.
I never said that modern cars didn't need a break-in period, but I said it was not as stringent as in decades gone by.
And Beet, I could care less what some magazine has to say about a car. I am more thanqualified to write and article about a car, and I could say your Audi is junk in it for various reasons, if I wanted to. - skuzzy
Oooooooer!! Lighten up! I only posted that link because I thought you'd find it interesting, and for no other reason. I only read the Service section, and scanned the rest. By the way you reacted, I'm guessing it wasn't a flattering write-up. I'll have another read of it. I wasn't trolling you.
just talked to an engine builder buddy and guy I use for machine work and he said that motors with short oil change intervals look a lot better when torn down than those that he considers neglected... - lazs
Lazs, I don't disagree with you or jackal that those old legacy engines that you guys have in your cars benefit from a short interval between oil changes. The point is that the modern engines benefit from all the things Mora has already pointed out: Cleaner running because of more efficient computerised engine management and fuel injection, "lean burn" engines, improved engineering which allows engines to be built to finer tolerances, improved oil technology and modern synthetic oils. For these reasons, the service interval is much longer these days. Do those old V8 klunkers enjoy any of these benefits?
While I'm STILL waiting to hear from Jackall as to why new car warranties have become longer, not shorter, with the advent of long service intervals and no need for a "break-in" oil, I did some research on Hyundai, the Korean car maker. Hyundai models have a service interval of 10,000 miles, and there is
NO "break in" oil needed and
NO initial oil change at ~1000 miles. Despite this, Hyundai models in the UK are sold with a 5 year
unlimited mileage warranty. That is to say that if I drove 20,000 miles a year, after 4½ years the car would still be under warranty at 90,000 miles, despite never having used a "break-in" oil. Hyundai warranty link:
http://www.hyundai.co.uk/fiveYearWarranty/intro/"Break-in" oil - LOL - that really is a thing of the past!