Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > New Engine . . . Change the Oil ? How Soon ?
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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New_Yorker
Preach the Gospel always, use words when necessary
Location: Long Island, NY
Joined: Nov 26, 2010
Points: 219
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New Engine . . . Change the Oil ? How Soon ?
Original Message Jan 6, 2011 9:43 am |
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For every new engine I ever purchase, whether in a new car or a lawnmower I change the oil after just a few hours of use. I learned to do this because a new engine wears in and creates small metal particles that cause excess wear if they are not removed from the engine, and even in new cars with oil filters the filter is limited in how small the particles it can trap. In the case of my New Honda GX 270 engine that powers my Honda Snowblower, I ran the machine for about 2 hours, then drained and refilled the engine with 100% synthetic oil. When the oil was visible in the drain pan it was grey in color from the large quantity of metal wear particles suspended in the oil. I will probably wait another 4 to 6 hours of operation before doing another oil change. Considering that the expensive new engine only requires a little more than 1 quart of oil, and it has no oil filter, it seems a prudent investment to add these very early oil changes to the maintenance regimen of a new engine. Incidentally, Honda suggests the first change after 20 hours. Based on the evidence of the metal in the oil, I would suggest that is far too long to wait for that initial oil change. I'm curious how others feel about this.
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MN_Runner
Location: St. Paul, Minnesota
Joined: Dec 5, 2010
Points: 622
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Re: New Engine . . . Change the Oil ? How Soon ?
Reply #30 Jan 6, 2011 10:15 pm |
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New_Yorker
Preach the Gospel always, use words when necessary
Location: Long Island, NY
Joined: Nov 26, 2010
Points: 219
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Re: New Engine . . . Change the Oil ? How Soon ?
Reply #33 Jan 6, 2011 10:31 pm |
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What is wrong with you? I have been on this site for a few months while shopping for a snow blower. You have some good knowledge on these machines, but your attitude and ignorance make for some ruined forums. There are people like me who come to this site for knowledge not $#%* talking. If your going to talk $#%* all the time do it on facebook or something. Don't give New Yorkers a bad name. Change the oil whenever you want. It's your machine. My responses to S#*+& Talk is to explain myself clearly, and "In KInd" if you bothered to read the BS you'd already know that. Some simpleton attempting to say my advice is wrong or at odds with the manufacturers instructions when it obviously is not should expect such a reply. Even the Bible says one reaps what they sow. Read post #1 and tell me where I sow'd the replys I got ! The forums aren't ruined by me, just the idea that any lame-o advice is the same as the facts. My advice is good advice, so try asking yourself why that causes others to criticize it. I was not the one telling people to ignore the owners manual and grease something that has no need of grease, I just pointed out the truth. That was when the whole thing went downhill. That was who started talking S#*%@ Not Me. And they keep coming back to it, not me, I tried to move on. Proof - Read Post #1 again !
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Chxbeachva
Location: Long Island, NY
Joined: Oct 31, 2010
Points: 52
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Re: New Engine . . . Change the Oil ? How Soon ?
Reply #34 Jan 6, 2011 10:53 pm |
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My responses to S#*+& Talk is to explain myself clearly, and "In KInd" if you bothered to read the BS you'd already know that. Some simpleton attempting to say my advice is wrong or at odds with the manufacturers instructions when it obviously is not should expect such a reply. Even the Bible says one reaps what they sow. Read post #1 and tell me where I sow'd the replys I got ! The forums aren't ruined by me, just the idea that any lame-o advice is the same as the facts. My advice is good advice, so try asking yourself why that causes others to criticize it. I was not the one telling people to ignore the owners manual and grease something that has no need of grease, I just pointed out the truth. That was when the whole thing went downhill. That was who started talking S#*%@ Not Me. And they keep coming back to it, not me, I tried to move on. Proof - Read Post #1 again ! That's where you took what I wrote all wrong. This isn't your first post. Your advice is great advise, and I have read just about every post. You were smug on some of them and now there are people here who just want revenge. But, you feed into it. I just got my blower recently and I need to change my oil so I want to read what you, mike, mn, and all the other more experienced people have to say. I had in my head just to have the dealer pick the machine up every season. It would be super expensive but whatever, you pay for convinience. I have taken the covers off the belts and am pretty confident I can do the work myself. So thank you all for your knowledgeable posts and who cares when you change your oil or weither someone comments on a boat in the background. This is for fun and if we didn't love toys so much we would have bought the cheapest shovel in the store regardless what size driveway we have. Thanks again. Happy New Year.
This message was modified Jan 6, 2011 by Chxbeachva
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jrtrebor
Location: Michigan - 3 hours north of Chicago on the lake
Joined: Feb 10, 2010
Points: 539
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Re: New Engine . . . Change the Oil ? How Soon ?
Reply #36 Jan 6, 2011 11:23 pm |
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You just don't get it do you. You changed your oil after two hours that's great. The point people are making that your not getting is this. The manual as you say, suggests changing the oil in under 20 hours. So what happens when someone decides to wait until they have 15 hours of operating time on their blower before changing the oil? They are 5 hours under the 20 hours. If you believe as your constantly preaching you do. That everything in the Honda manual can be taken as the gospel truth. Then why have you just contradicted yourself by saying " I would suggest that is far too long to wait for that initial oil change". (by the way I agree 20 hour is far to long but that is what the manufacturer and the manual says). In your first post you stated. " Incidentally, Honda suggests the first change after 20 hours". Then in reply # 26 You stated this "The Owners Manual IS always right ! It requires the oil be changed once before 20 hours have been exceeded". So which is it? The manual is always right, which right. Before or after. I just feel sorry for all of those Honda owners out there who aren't "enlightened enough" to know that they really should change their oil before or after the first twenty hour of operation. What does Honda care selling a replacement engine only helps their top line. Gee, does that mean that maybe saying that the augers shafts don't ever have to be lubed may also be incorrect and an untrue statement under certain conditions? (which by the way it is). I held a broken auger shaft in my hand after it took a torch and a 12 ton press to get it out of the auger. In a court of law that would be the only evidence needed. To prove that the ever statement is wrong and untrue. You're not here pointing out the truth. Your here trying to point out your truth. Your relying on what a book is telling you and some others here are relying on their personal experiences. But the statement that really put things in focus for me. And the fact that you would make it, was this one. " If I leased cars, then OK maybe it'd make sense to do whatever is cheap, and minimum and let the next victim deal with the problems." That's great, a real testament to your character. You should have left that one out. Nothing personal. But you sometimes seem to be shooting yourself in the foot. Your doing the same thing that you say other are doing just from a different perspective. "My advice is good advice, so try asking yourself why that causes others to criticize it." I would say the answer to that question is. The times you've been criticized were when you were giving 'advice" solely on what your manual told you. Even tho a few others here had actual first hand experiences. Disproving your manuals advice. Now, your here tonight making statements. questioning your manuals advice. (As per your fist post. And my first few statements). After you found first hand evidence in your drip pan. That the manual is not always correct. What ever. It's a message board. No big deal.
This message was modified Jan 6, 2011 by jrtrebor
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