by Suff » 10 Aug 2017, 04:03
Ria,
But for the changes I've seen in oil technology over the last decade and a conversation with my son in law two weeks ago, I would have replied as WM did.
For 7 years understanding this was my daily working life, however time goes on and things change.
Most of us understand a bit about oil and how it works with cars, many of us have experience that oil will last well beyond the stated lifetime given by the manufacturer.
Sadly, with technology changes that has changed and in order to make the correct decision I need to talk a little (just a little), about that.
Oil has a SAE rating. Essentially what that rating tells you is how thick the oil is at each temperature. SAE 10:40 means that an oil is of a viscosity 10 at cold temperatures and 40 at high working temperatures in an engine. This is vital because if you used a 40:40 oil in a car you were operating in, say, Alaska, the oil would be too thick to pump around the engine at startup in very cold temps and it would destroy the engine. Equally if you used a 10:10 oil in the Sahara, the oil would not offer any protection at any temperature and the oil would be too thin to protect the engine.
A 10:40 oil is a compromise where the oil itself has additives which thicken the oil as it heats up so that it will provide the protection needed at each operating temperature.
As computer engineering has advanced, the tolerances within the engine have become smaller, requiring thinner oil for it to work and be protected. Most very modern cars have 0:30 oil. 30 years ago nobody would have put an oil with a top SAE of 30 in a vehicle, it wouldn't have lasted 30,000 miles without destroying it.
The conversation I had with my son in law, two weeks ago, was around what happened when his son put the latest 10:20 fully synthetic oil in an old VW beetle.... Totally destroyed the bearings in the engine.
So, after this long explanation for a simple statement (I wanted anyone who knows a bit about oils and tolerances to understand this), in short, if your car is monitoring the quality of the oil, it is because the oil itself doesn't have much tolerance and that you must be using oil which has not degraded over time.
If a car is monitoring the quality of the oil and it says change it, that is because the engine will sustain damage if you go below the tolerance level; because the manufacturing of the engine requires an oil which is so thin that it can only protect the engine if it is virtually pristine. Naturally if it gets thinner (quality drops), then it is too thin and surfaces will start to wear and that is a very short slope to disaster.
I would reschedule the service and get the oil changed.
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.