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Adding 1qt/2K, ever need to change oil?

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by AllenZ, Aug 18, 2012.

  1. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    ...yes but I took minority view that he may be OK, can I get partial credit for independent thinking?
     
  2. rwyckoff

    rwyckoff Phev's Plus Home Solar power1

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    Absolutely!

    Maestro8 is another story!
     
  3. GrGramps

    GrGramps Active Member

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    I find this a fascinating thread. The OP has asked a valid question and has received numerous answers that don't fit his logic. Although I have been changing oil in my cars for over 60 years, I don't consider myself an expert. I use Fram filters and anyone who reads the forums knows that they are consistently judged as junk by the experts.

    I will be quite satisfied to hear that he chooses to continue adding oil as needed, and change it when he is ready. That would not be my choice, but it's his engine. Torture tests have interested me over the years, so my request to the OP is that he keep us posted. I wish him good luck!

    And, no, I don't have a Prius, but my wife just bought a new Prius V.
     
  4. AllenZ

    AllenZ Active Member

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    Guess I should have made it clear from beginning that this is a technical question, not a financial one. No need to worry about me burn my engine. :) Thanks for the advices, but as a few people pointed, they are not to the point of my question.

    Not technically related to the discussion of my question, but I found many people on this forum are overly sensitive on certain things, as if those are so absolutely this or that way, they can't be between 0% and 100%. It is fun sometimes to challenge such "conventional wisdoms". If you pay attention, you will find many of them sounds good but not true. It is just that many people somehow take the face value, the sound bite, and go along blindly. Example: "Safety is priority one, and whatever it takes...." The truth is, nothing can be so valuable, that you can afford to have it, if it takes (costs) way too much to get. Obviously driving, walking on street has risks, if "whatever it takes..." is true, stay home and starve?

    Glad that some people still think with their own brain, and they somehow even show up once in a while. So I am still hopeful...

    Just a little though...
     
  5. Mike Mc

    Mike Mc '16 Prius 4, '13 Prius 3

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    The OP asked a question on a forum of similar vehicle owners that have a variety of life experiences not in a forum of mechanical/lubrication engineers. I have only tried to explain to someone who might not understand what makes engines tick.
    I do not consider myself an expert in anything and your definition of an expert probably differs from mine. I grew up building engines for race cars, and currently I manage a Fleet of 1800 cars, does this make me an expert, no it doesn't. I know that some engines seem to be bullet proof and others are extremely fragile. In this case the OP's car has made it this long and no one can forecast how much longer it will last. Most of the people you will find here are here to help others and learn about their own car, that is why I am here.

    There are many places on the net where you can find plenty of late night reading material on lubrication.


    Basic Lubrication Design - Bob is the Oil Guy
     
  6. maestro8

    maestro8 Nouveau Member

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    You're leading us into the "No true Scotsman" fallacy, but I'll play your game.

    ...because the amount of heat created in the combustion chamber limited. That "dirt and grime" is a composite of many materials, including particles of metal and various grit that makes it past the air, fuel and oil filters. The combustion chamber is not a blast furnace; it's not going to incinerate everything that makes it in!

    Even if the combustion chamber did manage to heat everything to its vaporization point, we're not guaranteed that the vapors would make it all the way out the tail pipe. The engine is not at thermal equilibrium; there are hot and cold spots throughout, and the vapors could condense right where we wouldn't want them.

    Do we need to explain this in even further detail? If so, grab your thermodynamics book...

    One does not need to gather statistics to know the effects of abrasives inside the combustion chamber. Just send your own oil out for analysis, you can see for yourself... it's not going to be clean after 5k miles, by any measure.
     
  7. jadziasman

    jadziasman Prius owner emeritus

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    Caught you contradicting yourself , AllenZ. You stated at the beginning of this thread that:

    My goal is to lower the cost, and I am willing to take reasonable risks backed by technical knowledge.

    So which is it AllenZ?

    rwyckoff has lumped together virtually every response to your initial statement so far as non-technical and basically of no help to you. So "technically" he's on your side apparently. Nothing wrong with that.

    You've been provided with some sound advice and at absolutely no cost. Most of us are merely trying to be helpful and are not debating the merits of saving the cost of about 2 qts of oil and a filter if you changed every 5000 miles.

    So, since none of us has provided convincing "technical" reasons why you shouldn't be doing what you're doing PLEASE continue to do it. Best of luck to you. You're going to need it. (just my non-technical opinion).
     
    Mike Mc likes this.
  8. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    ...probably even the worlds lube experts do not know when a Prius leaking oil, when the leak is big enough to avoid refills, if there is no test lab data. So the idea of asking for expert testimomy on this situation is a little problematic. Many on Prius chat use lube oil test labs available to check quality, that would be the obvious answer. If we are saving money, then that option is out. Some sort of quick appearance check (paper spot test or equiv) would seem advisable to make sure nothing unexpected is happening.

    I still think filter replacement after max 10K is suggested. If you are losing 1qt oil every 2K miles, and you lose another 1-qt in the filter replacement you are replacing ~50% oil inventory just in that one 2K period. I gotta think Mobil-1 or equiv. high quality synthetic may help to prevent the gunking that may have caused the oil leakage, and may help to flush it out. There is also Mobil-1 5W-30 "High Mileage Formula" which is designed to reduce leakage.
     
  9. AllenZ

    AllenZ Active Member

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    Nice catch :)...........................Almost

    I guess you can have a financial goal, with a technical question. The technical discussion being the primary focus, with a potential by product of saving some money as extra reward.

    How's that spin? :)
     
  10. AllenZ

    AllenZ Active Member

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    I think this is pretty close to what I was looking for. Thanks!
    I understand the deposition of metal particle to cooler spots during the burning process, which might be a problem (but what kind?) when the amount accumulates. Changing oil more often will supply cleaner oil to burn, leave less deposits in combustion chamber.

    So the key is, what harm the deposits in chamber can cause?

    One thing I do notice is that if at 80 mph, it burns much more oil than running 60 mph. Just had a 300 miles trip, 250 miles were at 75-80 mph. 0.4 qt oil were gone. Normally it should lost 0.15 qt.
     
  11. roamerr

    roamerr Member

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    I changed my view now that I better understand what you asked. Technically you don't need to change it. I'd wager a bet that if you only added oil you would likely have a non oil related issue before an oil related issue. I really do not know of any engine failures in last 20 years in an engine that had oil.
     
  12. Curiousgb

    Curiousgb New Member

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  13. jadziasman

    jadziasman Prius owner emeritus

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    How's your spin?

    As Mr. Horse used to state on the Ren and Stimpy show:



    Initially you were trying to save a few bucks, now you're on a quest to prove all the naysayers wrong.

    Whatever spins your wheels, dude.
     
  14. maestro8

    maestro8 Nouveau Member

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    Put your money where your mouth is. Stop changing the oil in your car and tell us what happens.

    Arguing from a point of ignorance only proves your ignorance, not your argument.
     
  15. vertex

    vertex Active Member

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    I think I can put this discussion to rest. The answer is that if you are burning oil, and add 4 quarts of oil every 8000 miles, you have not removed all the old oil in 80000 miles, some of the original oil is still there, whereas if you change your oil once every 8000 miles, all the oil is changed once.
    If you car holds 4 quarts, and after 2000 miles you have 3 left and add one, then you have 75% old oil, 25% new oil. The next time you add a quart at 4000 miles you have 3 quarts of oil that consits of 2.2 5 quarts of the original oil, 0. 75 quarts of the oil from the first quart added and 1 quart of new oil. At 6000 miles, you have 1.6875 quarts of the original oil, .6625 quarts of the first quart added left, and .75 quarts of the second quart added and 1 quart of fresh oil. At 8000 miles you add your 4th quart, but have 1.4 quarts of the original oil, .5 quarts of the first quart added, etc. As you can see there is always something left from each quart added, so you never do a complete oil change.
    It is true that you add some fresh additives each time, but not enoug so the old stuff never gets completely removed, and you have sludge start to build up, water retention which turns the oil accidic, and metal particles building up. A long term recipe for disaster.
    So, if you would normally change your oil once every 5000 miles, you can push it to 6000 because you are replenishing some additive, but do not go much more. If you use Mobil 1 extended life, you can go to 15,000 or maybe 20,0000, but you should change the filter more often. The bottom line, you would be foolish not to change your oil completly periodically. I have a friend that had a new "oil change plan" for his leased car. He figured that he could get away without changing the oil at all on his 2 year lease. Well, a few weeks before the 2 years were up, the engine threw a rod because the oil no longer was lubricating the engine.
     
  16. AllenZ

    AllenZ Active Member

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    Here is my approach on calculation. Assuming every 2K miles the oil gets 1a amount of particle in 4qt total oil.
    New: 0a
    After 2K: 1a. Since we burned 1qt oil, only 0.75a particle left. Obviously I made simplification here.
    Add 1qt new oil, back to 4qt, with particle % 0.75a

    So here are data:
    Oil Mileage: particle %; particle % after 2K; particle % after add 1qt (assume total 4qt);
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------
    New: 0a; 1a; 1a*0.75 = 0.75a;
    2K: 0.75; 1.75; 1.31 (no need dup the "a")
    4K: 1.31; 2.31; 1.73;
    6K: 1.73; 2.73; 2.05;
    8K: 2.05; 3.05; 2.29;
    10K: 2.29; 3.29; 2.47;
    12K: 2.47; 3.47; 2.60;
    14K: 2.60; 3.60; 2.70;
    16K: 2.70; 3.70; 2.78;
    18K: 2.78; 3.78; 2.83;
    20K: 2.83; 3.83; 2.87;
    ...
    Of cause I assumed that the filter keeps working, capturing certain % of particles. That means, we need to change filter. (another calculation waiting...)

    It is interesting that
    at 6K, the particle % is equivalent to 4K level of none-burning engine's oil.
    at 10K, the particle % is equivalent to 5K level of none-burning engine's oil.
    at 20K, the particle % is equivalent to 5.7K level of none-burning engine's oil.
    ....
    Seems like it will stop at around 6.0K level of none-burning engine's oil quality.

    Obviously this calculation is not accurate, there are other factors make the actual number better or worse. But I think the ball park number is close.

    My argument is: If 10-12K oil change interval is acceptable for 25K/year usage, a good engine's "average oil quality" is around 5-6K oil mileage level, almost same as my oil quality, then I will never need to change oil.

    I love math!
     
  17. AllenZ

    AllenZ Active Member

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    Maybe you did not get the point?
    I almost agree with naysayer's recommendation, but not their technical reasoning.
     
  18. uart

    uart Senior Member

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    From a practical point of view. Since you still need to change the filter, then you still need to get under the car, you still need something to catch the oil, you're still going to get your hands dirty. Are you really going to save that much of anything (time or money) compared to if you drain and refill the oil at the same time? For me personally, I'd say that by the time I'd made the effort to change the filter it would add no more than a few minutes extra to do the oil as well.

    Also, I think it's extremely optimistic to assume that the "bad guys" in your oil, like sludges and gums, are going to get burnt up at the same rate as the "good parts" of your oil. Personally I think that the engine would have a higher risk of sludging up if you only ever top off the oil.
     
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  19. AllenZ

    AllenZ Active Member

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    Good points hart, on the practicality side! I am surprised I did not think about it and no others mentioned neither.

    The "bad guys" will burn as much as good oil, because they are evenly mixed all the time. The thing I want to learn is what's the effect of burning dirty oil through the combustion chamber. I am sure some of the "dirt" will deposit inside chamber, but how much? and what kind of harm it can cause the engine? I have no knowledge on that and hopefully someone who knows will come and help.
     
  20. vertex

    vertex Active Member

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    10-12K is acceptable with synthetic oil only.