View Full Version
:
oil change and oil loss
Greenstoner
11-20-2012, 03:27 PM
I started to do my own oil change and notice i lost about half bottle (2 to 3 quartz) everytime i drained the tank
Is this normal ? I am positive there is no leak, at least from what i can see
AVS_Racing
11-20-2012, 03:34 PM
your car consumes oil??
BrRsn
11-20-2012, 03:55 PM
The problem is that your car has an oil gremlin. In the winter months it is very common for them to move into your engine and start living in the warmth provided by the viscous, hot oil present in your oil pan.
They live in the oil but also feed off of it. I recommend pulling off the head and pouring in some RAID to get rid of the gremlins. The last thing you want is your car to run out of oil as you're driving.
snails
11-20-2012, 03:59 PM
step one: steal oil
step two: ???????
step three: profit!
:fullofwin:
Leopold Stotch
11-20-2012, 04:14 PM
what type of car you have, may help diagnose whether or not it has a problem.
what i mean is some cars tend to burn and others don't.
like my car isn't' supposed to burn, but oil kept "disappearing", which is when i found out i had a valve cover leak.
PetrolHead
11-20-2012, 05:47 PM
What is the mileage of your car? Do you ever see any blue smoke at startup or under acceleration? What weight of oil do you use/ what is the recommended weight? You might want to go up in weight and see if it helps, i.e 5w20 to 10w30.
Phil@rise
11-20-2012, 05:48 PM
Dont matter what kind of car....its an Oil gremlin nothing you can do.
vantrip
11-20-2012, 06:20 PM
If your doing a lot of WOT runs then more than likely the engine is burning extra oil, keep in mind every engine consumes oil, some much more than other.
I heard if you wait long enough a genie lamp comes on and grants you wishes :troll:
Some cars burn some oil, ex. RX8
jlenko
11-20-2012, 07:56 PM
The problem is that your car has an oil gremlin. In the winter months it is very common for them to move into your engine and start living in the warmth provided by the viscous, hot oil present in your oil pan.
They live in the oil but also feed off of it. I recommend pulling off the head and pouring in some RAID to get rid of the gremlins. The last thing you want is your car to run out of oil as you're driving.
Man, it would be priceless if this turned into anything like the sand porting my head thread..
Greenstoner
11-20-2012, 08:07 PM
i drive a 06 mazda 3 and using 5w20
not sure if this gonna help
so im guessing the amount of the oil consumption is consider normal ?
Phil@rise
11-20-2012, 08:21 PM
I heard if you wait long enough a genie lamp comes on and grants you wishes :troll:
Like..
I wish I checked that oil sooner!
Or..
I wish that Oil Gremlin would leave me alone!
How bout..
I wish those guys on RS didnt fuck with me!
BrRsn
11-20-2012, 08:30 PM
i drive a 06 mazda 3 and using 5w20
not sure if this gonna help
so im guessing the amount of the oil consumption is consider normal ?
Oil consumption is perfectly normal. You should monitor it and top up as needed every other week (what I usually do).
My engine burns about a quart every 1000 km's and its got a 6 quart capacity so I gotta stay ontop of it or it'll become low real quick
bloodmack
11-20-2012, 08:36 PM
yah, my car is leak free and i still lose oil. All that WOT during the corners :ifyouknow:
Volvo-brickster
11-20-2012, 08:36 PM
I started to do my own oil change and notice i lost about half bottle (2 to 3 quartz) everytime i drained the tank
Is this normal ? I am positive there is no leak, at least from what i can see
you are down 2-3 liters ? ( 1 qt = .9 Liters ) with each change ?
either you have one big leak or you are burning
I've heard stories of losing up to 1.5L at a change and losing 0.1L at a change on the same car. Difference was driving like a mad man and driving like a granny. Car was fairly new as well.
satek
11-20-2012, 09:23 PM
5w20 is thin oil... you should give 10w30 a try.
Energy
11-20-2012, 09:23 PM
Some cars burn some oil, ex. RX8
S2000 and Integra Type-R too.
bloodmack
11-20-2012, 09:41 PM
ford probe leaks and burns oil :okay: RIP my probe march 2012
ToneCapone
11-20-2012, 09:57 PM
After driving Honda's (92+97 accord, and 98 prelude) where I never needed to top oil I was also really surprised to find out my Pathfinder consumes large amounts. After much research I found out there isn't much I can do. Some engines just have these issues. VQ35DE engines (Path, Qx4, G35, FX35) are known to consume oil and all you can do is top it off every week or so.
oh, and the consumption decreased after I started using 10W30 (from 5W30).
Iceman-19
11-20-2012, 09:57 PM
So much fail in this thread. All internal combustion engines burn oil over time. It breaks down over the natural course of lubrication and protecting the internal rotation parts. If it is consuming an EXCESSIVE amount, that is bad. Do not change the weight of the oil, put in what the manufacture recommends, they know what they are doing.
satek
11-20-2012, 10:05 PM
So much fail in this thread. All internal combustion engines burn oil over time. It breaks down over the natural course of lubrication and protecting the internal rotation parts. If it is consuming an EXCESSIVE amount, that is bad. Do not change the weight of the oil, put in what the manufacture recommends, they know what they are doing.
You should do some research before you talk. Cars with over 100,000km should move to a thicker grade of oil.
1990TSI
11-20-2012, 10:08 PM
mazda 3 2.3 has a known oil consumption problem.
ask any owner....that has checked the oil.
keep running the 5/20 but please check it more often or you will be buying a new motor.
true story
Traum
11-20-2012, 10:13 PM
How frequent (both in terms of time and mileage) are you doing your oil changes?
If you are only losing 1/2 a bottle over 8k km or so, it isn't something I'd worry about at all. Just keep an eye on your engine's oil consumption (say, check it once every 1000 km or so), and top it off as necessary. Even if your engine is burning that 1/2 bottle over 4k km, it still isn't a significant enough amount to be concerned about. (But it is something you want to keep a closer eye on.)
Some people will recommend going to a thicker oil to minimize the oil burning problem, but I consider that bad advice. It is fine to move to a thicker oil if your typical operating conditions warrants it (eg. high temp, lots of WOT or heavy throttle, etc.). But to do so as a cure to an oil consumption problem, it is not an appropriate solution because it doesn't really fix anything.
So much fail in this thread. All internal combustion engines burn oil over time. It breaks down over the natural course of lubrication and protecting the internal rotation parts. If it is consuming an EXCESSIVE amount, that is bad. Do not change the weight of the oil, put in what the manufacture recommends, they know what they are doing.
You're the one that fails, bud.
And Wankel rotary engines burn oil by design, so I don't understand the fail you handed out.
skylinergtr
11-21-2012, 12:09 AM
not a fan of 5w20 oil weight here. It's too thin.
I swapped out my 5w20 spec oil on my ford explorer 4.6L to 5w30 without any issues.
Originally Posted by Iceman-19
So much fail in this thread. All internal combustion engines burn oil over time. It breaks down over the natural course of lubrication and protecting the internal rotation parts. If it is consuming an EXCESSIVE amount, that is bad. Do not change the weight of the oil, put in what the manufacture recommends, they know what they are doing.
Sometimes they don't know what they are doing. Thin oil is used to maximize fuel efficiency. Weren't some RX8's spec'd with a 5w20 oil? on a vehicle that is known to consume oil and has a high rev range do you think that's okay? perhaps that's why there is an engine recall...
RX8s were spec'd with the wrong oil right from the start. It was done to help with fuel economy or something like that. Of course not too long after, RX8 owners found themselves with prematurely dead engines because it wasn't the right grade. And using any other grade voided the warranty. There's a reason these cars are depreciating faster than say, 350Zs.
heleu
11-21-2012, 09:05 AM
It's not just RX-8s. Ask anyone with a BMW (especially M), turbo Subaru, etc. They all burn a bit of oil - it's normal and within factory specs to do so.
vBulletin® v3.8.11, Copyright ©2000-2026, vBulletin Solutions Inc.