Where did you hear that? Any reliable evidence??It's usually important to not perform the very 1st oil change on a new vehicle before the recommended interval. New engines will ship with a different formulation of oil that is optimized for break-in of the engine.
It's a lot easier than I imagined. Once the engine cover is removed, you simply need to hold the socket wrench handle in your left hand, and the socket and socket extension in the right hand, and carefully negotiate that right hand between the fuse box on the right and the engine on the left. There's plenty of room. Once you get the socket seated onto the hex nut filter housing cover, you should be able to angle the extension between the socket and the wrench and be able to ratchet it in either direction for loosening and tightening. Try to loosen the cover slowly and carefully knowing that the filter housing assembly is a separate unit that is attached directly to the engine. You don't want to break a seal or gasket. The old/used filter element takes a bit of pulling pressure to get it out of the filter housing cylinder. It should simply pop right out. Getting the new one in requires a bit of patience. It can either pop back in to the filter housing assembly by itself (popping it in to the bottom, separate from the cover), or you can pop it onto the cover and simply install the element by putting the cover back on. By screwing the cover back on with the filter element attached to the underside of the cover, the filter element should pop back on or seat itself onto the bottom of the filter housing assembly by itself. I tried the first method -- popping the element onto the bottom of the filter housing assembly without the cover. However, I had a problem screwing the cover back on. Then I tried the second method -- attaching the element onto the underside of the cover and then simply screwing the cover back onto the housing assembly with the filter attached to the cover. That worked great. As to whether you'll have issues with your fairly long/tall socket, I can't say for sure but you shouldn't have any problems. If you do, simply get a low profile socket and try replacing the wobble extension with a universal joint with regular extension attached. Good luck and have fun. Don't forget the beer.Thanks for the info. I'm off to sears to get a locking extension and some wobble sockets.
I have a 32mm socket that I used on my 335d but it is 1 1/2 inches deep.
How hard is it to get the old oil filter off the engine without spilling the oil?
Yours is the first info I have found on doing B58 engine oil change.
Thanks again.
Good info. I'm changing every 5,000 miles.I'm curious how many of the advocates of early oil changes have put extensive miles on a vehicle that was running high quality synth oil? By high quality I mean an oil that demonstrates good TBN and low SAPs for direct injection applications.
Wife had a 1st gen Honda Insight when we 1st met. I started taking care of all the maintenance for her shortly after we met. I used mobile 1 0-20 in that car and only changed it per Mobile's rec of 1yr or 10K miles, whichever come first. The upper of that motor was clean as a brand new sewing machine when we traded it in. Ran about 80k miles with extended oil changes occurring at 9-10.5k intervals. Total mileage on trade in was 130k.
The story was the same with my 2004 F150. I used Mobile 5-20 synth and changed it at the recommended interval. Had no problems with the "sludging" effect that the 5.4 Triton V8 was known for. The upper was clean. I even cut open an old filter once to observe. Nothing but clean oil was observable. I traded that vehicle at 100k to avoid the infamous 2004-2007 spark plug debacle
I'm servicing my Escape the same way, except I will change the oil early if the vehicle prompts me to via the OLM. So far all oil changes have occurred at 9-9.5k intervals. I've put almost 80k miles on the motor. The upper is still perfectly clean and extracted oil is a rich amber color.
I just don't think there is any legit reason to accelerate oil changes for a vehicle that isn't being run on the track or left idling for extended periods. I'm not a tree hugger by any means, but I still prefer to not waste resources if I don't need to. Modern lubricants are far superior to the dinosaur oil that was used back in the seventies. I've maintained a series of vehicles for a cumulative total of over 250k miles with extended oil change intervals and have not had any engine problems whatsoever. If both the oil manufacturer and the auto manufacturer recommend a reasonable interval, I will use it. If they recommend different intervals, I will use the shorter one.
I fully admit that in the case of BMW, they may have a conflict of interest due to their free maintenance program. In this case, I would look to the various "approved" oils and see what the oil manufacturer recommended intervals are. If they are shorter than BMW I would use that shorter interval.
I'm wondering if there is a general misunderstanding out there regarding DI motors and carbon buildup? Increased OCI won't solve DI carbon buildup issues. The best PM for that is to only burn quality gas and to use low SAPs oils. All of the factory recommended oils should be low SAPs and "Top Tier" gasoline is easy to find.
We change our own gawdam oil every 5,000 miles.I do 5k. I'm low mileage so 5k comes right around the 1 year mark. It's also a convenient way to remind me. I suppose I prefer that reminder over a light on the dash.
On one of my cars I've only done 1k miles this year. Seems strange to change the oil, but that's what the gurus advocate and I enjoy the project anyways.
Is there any ferrous metal in this engine's internals? If not, a mag trap would be pointless.Looking at the black oil that came out there were tiny metallic particles...swath, presumably from the running-in process...I expected that. Don't know why the oil drain plug isn't magnetic. Although, particles don't appear to be attracted by same. Tiny little particles, not many and present in the filter also.
2,260m
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