At Sam's Club, 6 x Mobil 1 0W30 oil is $27.xx. Probably at Costco, is the same thing. Mazda filter from Amazon, is $10. But, you have to do it yourself and deal with the old oil/filter.
Third service. 20,400 miles.
Geolanders at 7/32 and 8/32 so on track for a 40-50k miles life.
Dealer charges 8.60 per qt for the Moly.
My total came to 114 USD with rotation of tires. Paid 94 after discount. Me Thinks it's pricey.
I need to change engine air filter any brand recommend?
Was also asked about brake hydraulic system service at 116 usd. I have driven it 20 months 20k miles.
Also what do you think about alignment and tire balance? Last time I did that on a car not much was gained. Quoted 150 for both. Seems in line with other shops.
Mileage is good so far. I will aim for 40 mpg during morning commute and tank average of 30+ mpg.
Probably about right for the Geolandars. Biggest, noisiest hunks of crap rolling down the road.
That's expensive for a piece of maintenance that is easy to take care of yourself. Both oil, and rotation. I've had Discount Tire rotate my tires for free (an incentive to purchase from them - lifetime free rotations) and they didn't even ask for evidence that the tires were from them. Heh
A little premature for both alignment and brake system, IMO. Brake system flush is also stupid easy, with the right tools, and those tools are inexpensive. But, no reason you can't expect several years out of your brake fluid...
A little premature for both alignment and brake system, IMO. Brake system flush is also stupid easy, with the right tools, and those tools are inexpensive. But, no reason you can't expect several years out of your brake fluid...
At 84k miles I never done an alignment on the CX-5. All tires are wearing evenly, rotated every 6-7k miles.
The dealership I go to has a brake flushing system and charges same price as Kaps' dealership. Done at 4 years/50k miles.
I do alignment, if I change some suspension part, or I hit the curb pretty badly.
At one of the Mazda dealerships here in LA(Glendale), they are pushing you to do an alignment.
Had a brand new set of Michelin premier LTX Tires installed
Yep, it’s 8.5 for the 19s also. I got them basically because I’ve never been disappointed by Michelin tires and reviews were so good. Think I’ll buy a tread depth gauge and track wear month to month. So far very happy with them but only 27 miles???You Premier LTX folks will have to let us know how the treadwear holds up over time/miles. For their 17" Premier LTX tires, new tread is only at 8.5/32nd tread, so call me skeptical.
I just wonder how many of those reviews are from when the tires are brand new.Yep, it’s 8.5 for the 19s also. I got them basically because I’ve never been disappointed by Michelin tires and reviews were so good. Think I’ll buy a tread depth gauge and track wear month to month. So far very happy with them but only 27 miles???
Today I drove it to work for the first time in rush hour traffic. Radar Cruise rocks! Most relaxing drive in traffic I can remember.
Did you let it bring you to a full stop and such? I haven't allowed it to do that yet because I'm not sure how well I trust it but was wondering if you used it in a stop and go scenario.
I just wonder how many of those reviews are from when the tires are brand new.
That said, everyone who gets them seems to like them. Just let us know how they hold up![]()
Thanks for spending time of doing it! I used to get Michelin tires most of time. But one set on my 2001.5 VW Passat started to develop dry rot on the sidewall in 4 years which disappointed me. The price is also getting higher and higher, such as Michelin Premier LTX 225/55R19 99V costs almost $50, or 30% more each than most other good quality tires! The most expensive tire should be expected having the best quality and performance. But I don't feel spending that much more to have some tire with several deficiencies. To me, a little less tread depth at 8.5/32" with 60,000-mile warranty on Premier LTX is fine, but low 44 psi maximum inflation pressure and heavier 27.34 lbs. weight are the deal breaker. Interestingly methil in a tire thread discussion eventually selected Yokohama YK740 GTX over Michelin Premier LTX after he spent much of his time at Costco feeling the Premier LTX and watching the tire installed. And these 2 tires were his final choices he needed to decide.I plan to. Went out and bought a depth gauge today and confirmed the 8.5/32 depth. Set up a excel spreadsheet and plan to track changes in depth over time. As far as the tires themselves Im very happy with them so far
⋯ As for the Michelin Premier. Well i did "played" with it in store. Sidewall are kinda soft ( i know once inflated it will get harder). I was able to easily bend the sidewall with 2 fingers and the thread blocks wont stay quiet on the long run. after a full year i'm expecting theses to be really noisy. That expanding center grooves technology and the additional grooves on the side wall that will appear as the tires wear down will raise the noise (additional zones of compression/decompression). Also ask the tech if he had one mounted on wheel and he had a set about to get installed so we went into the garage area and "played" with it again. Sidewall are not that hard, also another tech on site told me they are like all Michelin tires, balloon effect, meaning softer overall. That the only thing i can point a finger at for Michelin. Squishy balloon tires. Everything else is fine/great.
I do prefer hard tires in summer. It mean harsher ride but that the price to pay to get a little more cornering support and less rollover.
Also rubber thread was really soft, usually really soft rubber either wear fast or get very hard after a few year and tire noise get very loud.