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You must be a lot smaller than me lol. I can barely get my fingers on one of those boltsMeanwhile, you could swap out a starter on my old shitbox Ranger in 25 minutes if you know what you're doing
Mine is the 3.0L Vulcan, so we might be thinking of different things if you have the 2.3 or 4.0L.You must be a lot smaller than me lol. I can barely get my fingers on one of those bolts
10w20 is an oil viscosity I've never seen. You mean 0w20? Its a bit thin for an older engine like that. The fancy new 0w20, 0w16 oils are all for fuel efficiency and operation of fancy VVT systems, shit your 20 year old Stratus doesn't have.Is it ok to put 10w-20 in my car that wants 5w-30? It's a 2007 Dodge stratus with 170,000 miles.
All cars nowadays have a "high idle" mode in cold starts that will idle the car at like 1200 rpm instead of the normal 800. You don't need to idle the car until the temp gauge shows anything, let it idle until it drops to the normal idle speed and go, just don't rev the shit out of it the first few minutes. The car heats up a lot more effectively and quickly when you're actually moving and the engine is doing work.When the temp needle registers anything above C you are no longer in the winter temps regime, so warm up in idle until then.
As an alternative I use a mightyvac pump through the dipstick.
Oh, and if you actually change your own oil then consider a drain plug. Fumotos have a good reputation. They're like 40 bucks but tool free oil changes that are less messy (okay except maybe a jack) are pretty fucking cool actually. Just make sure it doesn't stick out beneath the frame or you run the risk of debris or particularly bad potholes/bumps hitting it.
That seems like a whole lot of hassle to go to when your arm is invariably going to get covered in oil unscrewing the filter anyway.As an alternative I use a mightyvac pump through the dipstick.
I don't recommend it because I get a new work truck every few years but I have done 20k+ oci's a few times. I normally try and do 10k. I only run valvoline full synthetic. The last 3 trucks (all 5.3 GM's) I traded in all ran fine with 200k's on the clock. And shitload of idle time. My current truck has ~6900 hours on the motor. It's always rust and drivetrain issues that do them. I useally only get 100k out of a transmission and wont put a 2nd one in a 200k truck thats starting to rust.Do not perform a 20,000 mile oil change even if God himself descends from heaven to tell you it's OK...
Not when it's clean and new (ie in the bottle), but once it's cooked and used a bit it sort of starts to acidify and very slowly break down, and it gets moisture and oxidation issues when sitting in a motor. Not actually a huge issue over a period of a few months, the reason they're (usually) shorter than that is likely meant as a failsafe against the random dude who just idles his car all day. In your case I would definitely just change it. You should never follow the intervals on the bottle, they're way too long even under perfect conditions.
Why are you trusting an oil bottle to tell you when to change the oil in your car?What about oil changes based on time? Oil bottle says 20,000 or 1 year. It's been 2 years and 2,000 miles.
Does it really go bad sitting?
You can pull the oil stick and rub it between your fingers and tell if it has any "grit" left in it. Oil does have a shelf life like that, but you are talking decades and decades, not a couple years setting.What about oil changes based on time? Oil bottle says 20,000 or 1 year. It's been 2 years and 2,000 miles.
Does it really go bad sitting?
It only takes like 20 minutes to change the oil in most cars so I just do it when I have the time.Just asking out of curiosity, during the summer or whenever it’s summer-hot out, do you guys change your oil in the morning or at night?
There's a much more effective method for gauging oil "condition" by letting a drop fall on some cardstock and observing the resulting stain, but it takes some practice to learn to do it right. I don't bother with that shit and just change the oil a little more frequently so it's not on its last legs.You can pull the oil stick and rub it between your fingers and tell if it has any "grit" left in it. Oil does have a shelf life like that, but you are talking decades and decades, not a couple years setting.
Get an E39 5 Series or E46 3 Series Bimmer instead. It'll keep you on your toes as this is when BMW's enshittification journey began (a handful of plastic engine parts, VANOS trouble etc) but it won't send you to the poor house via the funny farm like an E60 or E90 will.Kinda want to get an early 00’s German car to keep me wrenching and go slowly insane . I’m thinking a b5 Audi s4 with the 2.7 twin turbo that’s crammed inside the engine bay![]()
Subarus are for women. Presumably it's so they'll constantly panic and bring the car into a dealership so Subaru can bilk lesbians for money. It's part of a RW strategy to deprive the LGBTQIP+ of their funds. So shhhhhhhh. Mum's the word.Why on earth did fucking Subaru design the car to throw up an OBD code EVERYTIME IT IS IN THE SHADE.