Was told by my quick lube place that even if I don't put any miles on my car, I still need to change my synthetic oil once a year.
My car doesn't require oil changes until you hit 13,000 miles. I only put about 6000 a year on this particular car. Any suggestions?
I realize this isn't a tractor question, but if it needs to be done every year with my car, then I guess my tractor would need it too. Thanks
If the vehicle is stored inside where it does not see repeated temp/humidity changes everyday I would not worry about it.
When I was in the service in the late 70's I did a lot of research on synthetics. The govt had independent tests done to see about drain intervals, temp etc. One of the tests was done on a gas 454 chev engine in a dump truck. Synthetic oil was put in at 1000 miles then never changed until 60,000 miles, only the filter at 10,000 mile intervals. At 60,000 the engine was torn down and examined for wear, guess what like brand new, virtually NO WEAR on every part.
In the 80's I worked as a field service engineer for a major computer firm and clocked 25,000+ miles every year. I went to synthetic oil and changed the filter at 10,000, as per the test I listed above, and the whole works once a year. Ran the vehicle for usually 150,000 miles, never a problem. I ran 4 cylinder Honda's and would adjust the valves every 25,000 miles. Those motors were clean as a pin inside. A friend bought one from me and ran it another 140,000 miles until the body fell off. He continued with the same schedule I did, that motor purred like a kitten as he drove it to the bone yard.
My opinion is that a lot of perfectly good oil gets thrown away every year. Don't get me wrong, I am a big believer in maintenance, I just do not buy into the theory about oil going bad sitting there,, especially synthetics.
A lot of good info on stuff like this on the "Bob is the oil guy" forum.