It seems if you get your oil changed at the Mazda dealer that's what they use. I would change it again next spring and get synthetic, despite their recommendation.Good morning Mazda folks
Today I’m getting oil and filter change, 1000 on odometer. Was informed synthetic oil is not being used by Mazda because of turbo heat.
Whaaat?
All my BMWs use synthetic, from the e39 to g30, what’s up with that?
Good morning Mazda folks
Today I’m getting oil and filter change, 1000 on odometer. Was informed synthetic oil is not being used by Mazda because of turbo heat.
Whaaat?
All my BMWs use synthetic, from the e39 to g30, what’s up with that?
If it was necessary, the 2.5T would have specced it.Full Synthetic. Always.
Good morning Mazda folks
Today I’m getting oil and filter change, 1000 on odometer. Was informed synthetic oil is not being used by Mazda because of turbo heat.
Whaaat?
All my BMWs use synthetic, from the e39 to g30, what’s up with that?
I've always done my first oil change early on every new car as well, but not at 1,000 miles. That's a bit of overkill in my humble opinion. The engine is probably not 100% broken in by then either.1000 miles oil change on new vehicle has been my practice ever since I’ve own cars.
Others may not believe it but it’s my maintenance for longer use and ownership plus cost of oil changes are not that expensive.
It's not, but you at least get the dirt and silicone out of the oil, plus the fuel from before the rings seated, so that the remainder of the break-in is using clean oil. My fuel dilution was 4% at 1,200 miles and over the next 3,000 miles it only reached 2.5%.The engine is probably not 100% broken in by then either.
Very helpful to know!It's not, but you at least get the dirt and silicone out of the oil, plus the fuel from before the rings seated, so that the remainder of the break-in is using clean oil. My fuel dilution was 4% at 1,200 miles and over the next 3,000 miles it only reached 2.5%.
I beg to differ on that. I've been doing a lot of searching, and other than anecdotal stories, there is really no evidence that manufacturers use a special break in oil in today's vehicles. Maybe high end cars, like a Ferrari or something they do, but not on your run of the mill Honda, Toyota or any other main stream car maker.Yes, for most commuter cars you want to use regular/synthetic oil. Most come with a special break in oil from factory meant to help break in the parts. Which is why they typically recommend 500 to 1000 miles before the first oil change.
New Chevy Corvettes, as well as other high-end supercars recommend full synthetic only.
Right. That is a thing of the past, from what I understand.I beg to differ on that. I've been doing a lot of searching, and other than anecdotal stories, there is really no evidence that manufacturers use a special break in oil in today's vehicles.
When my Mazda 6 had about 3000km on it, I ran it to redline quite a few times one night. Burned some oil for most of it's life. One day, I noticed it just... Stopped consuming oil. Seemed to be correlated with a switch to 5w30 oil, though I cannot confirm that. Eventually resumed consumption again. Fast forward to today, over 300,000KM, I haven't seen much consumption on the dipstick for a while now.But the rationale for early oil changes is based on oil analysis. We know that the most wear that your engine will see is in the first few hundred to few thousand miles. The rings are also not fully seated and thus you'll see a higher rate of fuel getting by into the oil during that time. If you did enough oil samples you could plot out wear over time and watch the curve fall to normal levels.