11-07-2019, 09:33 AM | #29 | |
Drives: 2019 Chevrolet Camaro SS 1LE Join Date: Nov 2016
Location: Arizona
Posts: 596
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With that said, both my 2018 SS and 2019 SS have consumed no oil between oil changes. |
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11-07-2019, 12:54 PM | #30 |
Drives: 2010 Camaro Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Denver
Posts: 1,381
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Hi all,
To look deeper into the causes of oil usage on GDI engines, there are several causes. The most common being fuel dilution, which GM touches on in the TSB. As the fuel on GDI engines is introduced at 2000-3000 PSI directly into the cylinder, as much as 8-12 times the raw fuel is pushed past the rings washing down the cylinder walls and also diluting the already far to thin of viscosity oil specified, compared to the 45-55 PSI of the old port injection engines they replace. So that is one of the main reasons. Next ring seating. As all newer engine are built with low tension piston rings, piston ring seating is more critical than ever. Combine low tension rings with the engine pre-filled with a synthetic blend from the factory, and if you follow the dealer or owners manual and drive easy for the first 1500 miles, odds are you will not see proper seating prior to the hard glaze setting in that covers the abrasive cross hatch. This generally means that brief window of the first few hundred mile has past, and only a tear down and re-hone can give them another shot at proper seating. The correct way to break in a new engine is available to GM techs and other DIY Auto techs as shown here: This is NOT readily available to the average car buyer as most are considered not educated enough to follow these, and that is a liability to the automaker, but this works best and is done in the first 100-200 miles. Next is gumming up of the rings and ringlands so the piston rings become stuck and cannot move freely to seal properly. This is from that oil your consuming. So, how do you avoid this? break in the engine properly and get rings seated in that first few hundred miles and then get that debris filled oil OUT of the engine. ONLY run a full synthetic, and a 5w20 or 0w20 is not enough viscosity to deal with the fuel dilution, so we run 5w40-50 in all GDI engines. Install one of our E2-X dual valve systems to keep these fumes from causing deposits, and this also flushes and evacuated full time so these are flushed and removed before most has a chance to settle and accumulate. And no engine needs to sit 2 hours for oil to drain back from the valvetrain. 5 minutes is generally all the time you need to get an accurate reading on the dipstick. And yes, 3 times to make sure oil has drained down the tube. Want to see what is going on with your oil? An oil analysis is a great window into your engines wear. As our E2 and E2-X systems separate app. 95% of the combustion byproducts, this keeps your oil clean longer for the best protection. It also eliminates fuel dilution as well. Study this oil analysis from a long-term field tester for our systems: Watch for the 20k sample to show this is not a marginal improvement, but a dramatic reduction in the substances that cause more internal engine wear. Hope most find this helpful. Cheers! |
11-23-2019, 01:33 AM | #31 | |
Drives: gas powered Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: TN
Posts: 315
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My first oil change was at the 497 mile mark. I checked it at 2870 and it was down. so 2371 miles used a half quart maybe a little more. I receipt said oil used was 1235885 which the internets says is Mobil one 5w30. I topped it off with Mobil one 0w40 since all my other modern vehicles use this oil I have it on the shelf.
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11-23-2019, 04:25 PM | #32 | |
Drives: 17' 1SS 1LE GBA-Black Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: TLV
Posts: 810
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11-24-2019, 11:20 PM | #33 |
Drives: gas powered Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: TN
Posts: 315
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Yes,not worried about it but its was good you got me to check it.
I dont when I gas up since it ends up being 20 mins of strangers telling me nice car and what motors in it(they tell me) and they have one just like it at home with 3 turbos on it.
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11-25-2019, 06:22 PM | #34 |
Drives: 17' 1SS 1LE GBA-Black Join Date: Mar 2017
Location: TLV
Posts: 810
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11-30-2019, 12:29 PM | #35 | |
Account Suspended
Drives: 19 Camaro SS 1LE, 03 Ford Lightning Join Date: Nov 2019
Location: South Carolina
Posts: 334
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Quote:
Still I know GM had M1 develop that special 0W40 for the LT1 recently, but wouldn't a 10W40 or even 15W40 do better for keeping oil in the motor? What I mean is I thought motors that burn a lot of oil off do so mostly when they are cool and not up to their normal operating temperatures? Kind of like the mindset for making an older LS motor that had trouble burning off oil to not burn so much of it off was to switch from 5W30 oil to a 10W30 oil. (Which I always found worked well for stopping large oil consumption BTW) The theory behind it as I always understood it was that you wanted to thicken up the oil while it was cool as that's when most of it is escaping, but run the same viscosity when the motor is up to temperature. Would that not be the same case with a newer LT series suffering from excessive oil consumption? |
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11-30-2019, 01:00 PM | #36 |
Drives: like an old lady Join Date: Jun 2012
Location: indiana
Posts: 2,395
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my thought process was that the oil consumption isn’t through the motor specifically but through the pcv system. i presume thicker oil (when hot) is harder to pull. oil life shows 30%, roughly 5k miles on it now. level on the dipstick hasn’t budged from full. i don’t abuse the car but it frequently gets wot treatment.
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