maintenence advice
#1
Guest
Posts: n/a
maintenence advice
Hi,
I'm new to this group, but I'm a Honda fan.
I had to trade in my '94 Civic last august when I think I blew a head
gasket. It needed some other somewhat expensive work also. It only had 86k.
That sucked.
Anyway, my wife has a 2002 Accord Special Edition (it's sweet) and I got
myself a 2004 Accord Sedan (4 cyl.).
I am very happy with it, and want to take good care of it.
I noticed in the owner's manual it says to change the oil every 7k. As far
as I know, common practice for oil changes is 3k. I don't really drive it
that hard, but I am racking the miles driving to work. I'm driving 70-75mph
on the highway going with the flow. It's up to 15k in less than a year, so I
don't know if that justifies more frequent service.
Any tips would be appreciated.
Thanks,
John
I'm new to this group, but I'm a Honda fan.
I had to trade in my '94 Civic last august when I think I blew a head
gasket. It needed some other somewhat expensive work also. It only had 86k.
That sucked.
Anyway, my wife has a 2002 Accord Special Edition (it's sweet) and I got
myself a 2004 Accord Sedan (4 cyl.).
I am very happy with it, and want to take good care of it.
I noticed in the owner's manual it says to change the oil every 7k. As far
as I know, common practice for oil changes is 3k. I don't really drive it
that hard, but I am racking the miles driving to work. I'm driving 70-75mph
on the highway going with the flow. It's up to 15k in less than a year, so I
don't know if that justifies more frequent service.
Any tips would be appreciated.
Thanks,
John
#2
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: maintenence advice
"riplead" <jhalma@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:dMudnR2-SeAvju7fRVn-ow@comcast.com...
> Hi,
>
> I'm new to this group, but I'm a Honda fan.
>
> I had to trade in my '94 Civic last august when I think I blew a head
> gasket. It needed some other somewhat expensive work also. It only had
> 86k. That sucked.
>
> Anyway, my wife has a 2002 Accord Special Edition (it's sweet) and I got
> myself a 2004 Accord Sedan (4 cyl.).
>
> I am very happy with it, and want to take good care of it.
> I noticed in the owner's manual it says to change the oil every 7k. As far
> as I know, common practice for oil changes is 3k. I don't really drive it
> that hard, but I am racking the miles driving to work. I'm driving
> 70-75mph on the highway going with the flow. It's up to 15k in less than a
> year, so I don't know if that justifies more frequent service.
>
> Any tips would be appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
>
> John
>
To each their own. I go by the owner's manual myself, but use synthetic
after break-in. Several posters from the UK have indicated 15K km is common
there. Personally, I think 3K is unwarranted except in the case of cheap oil
in extreme conditions. After all, if 3K is right for non-extreme conditions,
what is right for extreme?
Mike
news:dMudnR2-SeAvju7fRVn-ow@comcast.com...
> Hi,
>
> I'm new to this group, but I'm a Honda fan.
>
> I had to trade in my '94 Civic last august when I think I blew a head
> gasket. It needed some other somewhat expensive work also. It only had
> 86k. That sucked.
>
> Anyway, my wife has a 2002 Accord Special Edition (it's sweet) and I got
> myself a 2004 Accord Sedan (4 cyl.).
>
> I am very happy with it, and want to take good care of it.
> I noticed in the owner's manual it says to change the oil every 7k. As far
> as I know, common practice for oil changes is 3k. I don't really drive it
> that hard, but I am racking the miles driving to work. I'm driving
> 70-75mph on the highway going with the flow. It's up to 15k in less than a
> year, so I don't know if that justifies more frequent service.
>
> Any tips would be appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
>
> John
>
To each their own. I go by the owner's manual myself, but use synthetic
after break-in. Several posters from the UK have indicated 15K km is common
there. Personally, I think 3K is unwarranted except in the case of cheap oil
in extreme conditions. After all, if 3K is right for non-extreme conditions,
what is right for extreme?
Mike
#3
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: maintenence advice
I think I heard somewhere that after you make the switch to synthetic oil,
you can't go back to regular oil. Is that true?, and I'm curious what
everybody's opinion is on synthetic oil.
I recently brought my care to my Honda dealership for an oil change and they
said it was about time for my 15k maintence. They want $300 for it. I
couldn't believe it. I looked at the list of what tasks were to be
performed, and a lot of it included "visual inspection" of this and that. It
sounded like a rip-off to me.
I would rather do my own maintenence, but it's not always convenient for my
schedule.
you can't go back to regular oil. Is that true?, and I'm curious what
everybody's opinion is on synthetic oil.
I recently brought my care to my Honda dealership for an oil change and they
said it was about time for my 15k maintence. They want $300 for it. I
couldn't believe it. I looked at the list of what tasks were to be
performed, and a lot of it included "visual inspection" of this and that. It
sounded like a rip-off to me.
I would rather do my own maintenence, but it's not always convenient for my
schedule.
#4
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: maintenence advice
riplead wrote:
> I think I heard somewhere that after you make the switch to synthetic oil,
> you can't go back to regular oil. Is that true?, and I'm curious what
> everybody's opinion is on synthetic oil.
>
> I recently brought my care to my Honda dealership for an oil change and they
> said it was about time for my 15k maintence. They want $300 for it. I
> couldn't believe it. I looked at the list of what tasks were to be
> performed, and a lot of it included "visual inspection" of this and that. It
> sounded like a rip-off to me.
>
> I would rather do my own maintenence, but it's not always convenient for my
> schedule.
>
>
>
On my '92 Accord, bought new, I do all the oil changes. I use Shell
10-40, and Fram filters. I replace the oil and filter every 5000 miles.
I used to average 20,000 miles (U.S.A.) per year. Just turned 225,000
miles.
I flush and change the antifreeze every two years, air filter yearly. I
replace the plugs, timing and countershaft belts, accessory drive belts,
and do a valve adjustment every 100,000 miles.
Clutch needed done two years ago, and I have gone through two
radiators. I bought the first muffler replacement at the Honda dealer,
and have received three free ones since.
Tires are from Toyo, and generally last 100,000 miles a set. I rotate
them front to back when I can measure 1/32'' difference wear.
Bob
> I think I heard somewhere that after you make the switch to synthetic oil,
> you can't go back to regular oil. Is that true?, and I'm curious what
> everybody's opinion is on synthetic oil.
>
> I recently brought my care to my Honda dealership for an oil change and they
> said it was about time for my 15k maintence. They want $300 for it. I
> couldn't believe it. I looked at the list of what tasks were to be
> performed, and a lot of it included "visual inspection" of this and that. It
> sounded like a rip-off to me.
>
> I would rather do my own maintenence, but it's not always convenient for my
> schedule.
>
>
>
On my '92 Accord, bought new, I do all the oil changes. I use Shell
10-40, and Fram filters. I replace the oil and filter every 5000 miles.
I used to average 20,000 miles (U.S.A.) per year. Just turned 225,000
miles.
I flush and change the antifreeze every two years, air filter yearly. I
replace the plugs, timing and countershaft belts, accessory drive belts,
and do a valve adjustment every 100,000 miles.
Clutch needed done two years ago, and I have gone through two
radiators. I bought the first muffler replacement at the Honda dealer,
and have received three free ones since.
Tires are from Toyo, and generally last 100,000 miles a set. I rotate
them front to back when I can measure 1/32'' difference wear.
Bob
#5
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: maintenence advice
"riplead" <jhalma@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:HIednYysopJphO7fRVn-ig@comcast.com...
> I think I heard somewhere that after you make the switch to synthetic oil,
> you can't go back to regular oil. Is that true?, and I'm curious what
> everybody's opinion is on synthetic oil.
>
> I recently brought my care to my Honda dealership for an oil change and
they
> said it was about time for my 15k maintence. They want $300 for it. I
> couldn't believe it. I looked at the list of what tasks were to be
> performed, and a lot of it included "visual inspection" of this and that.
It
> sounded like a rip-off to me.
>
> I would rather do my own maintenence, but it's not always convenient for
my
> schedule.
Not only did it sound like a rip-off to you, it IS a rip-off! Get this. The
local Lexus dealership wanted $350.00 to do a "15,000 mile maintenance
service" on my 2002 IS300. I did NOT go for it. The service rep rattled off
about a dozen things that they would supposedly do during this scheduled
maintenance, most of which was "visual inspection" or "road test" of this
and that. Okay. So I'm down at my favorite, independent, Asian car
mechanic's garage and thought I'd ask HIM about the 15,000 mile maintenance
for my 2002 Lexus IS300. He pops a CD-ROM disc into his PC from Lexus
themselves that contains all of the maintenance information for my car. He
said, "They're not supposed to do anything at 15,000 miles but change the
oil and filter, rotate the tires and top off any fluids that may be
low--along with visual inspections and road test. Do you really want to pay
them $350.00 plus tax for that???!!!" How's that for almost getting ripped
off big time? :-( I'm glad I was suspect of the local Lexus dealership's
practices. Sometimes it pays to be a 'Doubting Thomas' when it comes to
having a motor vehicle repaired. Or anything else for that matter. I mean
the guy was talking about them changing the "transmission fluid, gear oil
for the rear end" and all kinds of other things at 15,000 miles of
operation. Saved myself quite a bit of money on this one.
Ron M.
news:HIednYysopJphO7fRVn-ig@comcast.com...
> I think I heard somewhere that after you make the switch to synthetic oil,
> you can't go back to regular oil. Is that true?, and I'm curious what
> everybody's opinion is on synthetic oil.
>
> I recently brought my care to my Honda dealership for an oil change and
they
> said it was about time for my 15k maintence. They want $300 for it. I
> couldn't believe it. I looked at the list of what tasks were to be
> performed, and a lot of it included "visual inspection" of this and that.
It
> sounded like a rip-off to me.
>
> I would rather do my own maintenence, but it's not always convenient for
my
> schedule.
Not only did it sound like a rip-off to you, it IS a rip-off! Get this. The
local Lexus dealership wanted $350.00 to do a "15,000 mile maintenance
service" on my 2002 IS300. I did NOT go for it. The service rep rattled off
about a dozen things that they would supposedly do during this scheduled
maintenance, most of which was "visual inspection" or "road test" of this
and that. Okay. So I'm down at my favorite, independent, Asian car
mechanic's garage and thought I'd ask HIM about the 15,000 mile maintenance
for my 2002 Lexus IS300. He pops a CD-ROM disc into his PC from Lexus
themselves that contains all of the maintenance information for my car. He
said, "They're not supposed to do anything at 15,000 miles but change the
oil and filter, rotate the tires and top off any fluids that may be
low--along with visual inspections and road test. Do you really want to pay
them $350.00 plus tax for that???!!!" How's that for almost getting ripped
off big time? :-( I'm glad I was suspect of the local Lexus dealership's
practices. Sometimes it pays to be a 'Doubting Thomas' when it comes to
having a motor vehicle repaired. Or anything else for that matter. I mean
the guy was talking about them changing the "transmission fluid, gear oil
for the rear end" and all kinds of other things at 15,000 miles of
operation. Saved myself quite a bit of money on this one.
Ron M.
#6
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: maintenence advice
Engines, lubricants, gasoline, and driving conditions have come a long way
in the last 30 years but the mindset of the American public is still frozen
in the 50's......
"Ron M." <nobody@nowhere.net> wrote in message
news:1176s19l708hef6@corp.supernews.com...
> "riplead" <jhalma@comcast.net> wrote in message
> news:HIednYysopJphO7fRVn-ig@comcast.com...
>> I think I heard somewhere that after you make the switch to synthetic
>> oil,
>> you can't go back to regular oil. Is that true?, and I'm curious what
>> everybody's opinion is on synthetic oil.
>>
>> I recently brought my care to my Honda dealership for an oil change and
> they
>> said it was about time for my 15k maintence. They want $300 for it. I
>> couldn't believe it. I looked at the list of what tasks were to be
>> performed, and a lot of it included "visual inspection" of this and that.
> It
>> sounded like a rip-off to me.
>>
>> I would rather do my own maintenence, but it's not always convenient for
> my
>> schedule.
>
> Not only did it sound like a rip-off to you, it IS a rip-off! Get this.
> The
> local Lexus dealership wanted $350.00 to do a "15,000 mile maintenance
> service" on my 2002 IS300. I did NOT go for it. The service rep rattled
> off
> about a dozen things that they would supposedly do during this scheduled
> maintenance, most of which was "visual inspection" or "road test" of this
> and that. Okay. So I'm down at my favorite, independent, Asian car
> mechanic's garage and thought I'd ask HIM about the 15,000 mile
> maintenance
> for my 2002 Lexus IS300. He pops a CD-ROM disc into his PC from Lexus
> themselves that contains all of the maintenance information for my car. He
> said, "They're not supposed to do anything at 15,000 miles but change the
> oil and filter, rotate the tires and top off any fluids that may be
> low--along with visual inspections and road test. Do you really want to
> pay
> them $350.00 plus tax for that???!!!" How's that for almost getting ripped
> off big time? :-( I'm glad I was suspect of the local Lexus dealership's
> practices. Sometimes it pays to be a 'Doubting Thomas' when it comes to
> having a motor vehicle repaired. Or anything else for that matter. I mean
> the guy was talking about them changing the "transmission fluid, gear oil
> for the rear end" and all kinds of other things at 15,000 miles of
> operation. Saved myself quite a bit of money on this one.
>
> Ron M.
>
>
in the last 30 years but the mindset of the American public is still frozen
in the 50's......
"Ron M." <nobody@nowhere.net> wrote in message
news:1176s19l708hef6@corp.supernews.com...
> "riplead" <jhalma@comcast.net> wrote in message
> news:HIednYysopJphO7fRVn-ig@comcast.com...
>> I think I heard somewhere that after you make the switch to synthetic
>> oil,
>> you can't go back to regular oil. Is that true?, and I'm curious what
>> everybody's opinion is on synthetic oil.
>>
>> I recently brought my care to my Honda dealership for an oil change and
> they
>> said it was about time for my 15k maintence. They want $300 for it. I
>> couldn't believe it. I looked at the list of what tasks were to be
>> performed, and a lot of it included "visual inspection" of this and that.
> It
>> sounded like a rip-off to me.
>>
>> I would rather do my own maintenence, but it's not always convenient for
> my
>> schedule.
>
> Not only did it sound like a rip-off to you, it IS a rip-off! Get this.
> The
> local Lexus dealership wanted $350.00 to do a "15,000 mile maintenance
> service" on my 2002 IS300. I did NOT go for it. The service rep rattled
> off
> about a dozen things that they would supposedly do during this scheduled
> maintenance, most of which was "visual inspection" or "road test" of this
> and that. Okay. So I'm down at my favorite, independent, Asian car
> mechanic's garage and thought I'd ask HIM about the 15,000 mile
> maintenance
> for my 2002 Lexus IS300. He pops a CD-ROM disc into his PC from Lexus
> themselves that contains all of the maintenance information for my car. He
> said, "They're not supposed to do anything at 15,000 miles but change the
> oil and filter, rotate the tires and top off any fluids that may be
> low--along with visual inspections and road test. Do you really want to
> pay
> them $350.00 plus tax for that???!!!" How's that for almost getting ripped
> off big time? :-( I'm glad I was suspect of the local Lexus dealership's
> practices. Sometimes it pays to be a 'Doubting Thomas' when it comes to
> having a motor vehicle repaired. Or anything else for that matter. I mean
> the guy was talking about them changing the "transmission fluid, gear oil
> for the rear end" and all kinds of other things at 15,000 miles of
> operation. Saved myself quite a bit of money on this one.
>
> Ron M.
>
>
#7
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: maintenence advice
"riplead" <jhalma@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:HIednYysopJphO7fRVn-ig@comcast.com...
>I think I heard somewhere that after you make the switch to synthetic oil,
>you can't go back to regular oil. Is that true?, and I'm curious what
>everybody's opinion is on synthetic oil.
No - dino and synthetic oil are mixable and interchangable. I change with
synthetic and top off with dino oil inbetween.
The only issue (and some people feel it is a myth) is the risk of developing
seal leaks in old engines in the process of switching to synthetic. I've
certainly had it happen when I used engine flushes, so I stopped using those
and was wary when changing my old cars, but no problem yet.
The whole synthetic/dino oil thing is a "religious" issue - it often leads
to long threads that air lots of opinions and doesn't change anybody's
opinion. I use it largely because the alt.autos.volvo gurus assure me it
controls the crankcase ventilation and throttle body deposits that plague
the '80s Volvos - but some deny it is any more detergent than dino oil. You
get the picture.
>
> I recently brought my care to my Honda dealership for an oil change and
> they said it was about time for my 15k maintence. They want $300 for it. I
> couldn't believe it. I looked at the list of what tasks were to be
> performed, and a lot of it included "visual inspection" of this and that.
> It sounded like a rip-off to me.
>
> I would rather do my own maintenence, but it's not always convenient for
> my schedule.
>
No doubt about, most routine maintenance prices are unreasonable. The visual
inspections are important, but the prices are way out of line. I get around
the schedule problem by doing some of the service one day, and the rest
another. I start out by doing the active work (oil change, tire rotation,
coolant change or filter changes) at the appointed time and doing the
inspections when my schedule fits best. CV boots and ball joint inspections
don't even add any time to an oil change - while the oil is draining, just
slide on over and have a peek. But when the flat rate charges are
calculated, you can be sure it is x time for the oil change plus y time for
the inspection.
Mike
Mike
news:HIednYysopJphO7fRVn-ig@comcast.com...
>I think I heard somewhere that after you make the switch to synthetic oil,
>you can't go back to regular oil. Is that true?, and I'm curious what
>everybody's opinion is on synthetic oil.
No - dino and synthetic oil are mixable and interchangable. I change with
synthetic and top off with dino oil inbetween.
The only issue (and some people feel it is a myth) is the risk of developing
seal leaks in old engines in the process of switching to synthetic. I've
certainly had it happen when I used engine flushes, so I stopped using those
and was wary when changing my old cars, but no problem yet.
The whole synthetic/dino oil thing is a "religious" issue - it often leads
to long threads that air lots of opinions and doesn't change anybody's
opinion. I use it largely because the alt.autos.volvo gurus assure me it
controls the crankcase ventilation and throttle body deposits that plague
the '80s Volvos - but some deny it is any more detergent than dino oil. You
get the picture.
>
> I recently brought my care to my Honda dealership for an oil change and
> they said it was about time for my 15k maintence. They want $300 for it. I
> couldn't believe it. I looked at the list of what tasks were to be
> performed, and a lot of it included "visual inspection" of this and that.
> It sounded like a rip-off to me.
>
> I would rather do my own maintenence, but it's not always convenient for
> my schedule.
>
No doubt about, most routine maintenance prices are unreasonable. The visual
inspections are important, but the prices are way out of line. I get around
the schedule problem by doing some of the service one day, and the rest
another. I start out by doing the active work (oil change, tire rotation,
coolant change or filter changes) at the appointed time and doing the
inspections when my schedule fits best. CV boots and ball joint inspections
don't even add any time to an oil change - while the oil is draining, just
slide on over and have a peek. But when the flat rate charges are
calculated, you can be sure it is x time for the oil change plus y time for
the inspection.
Mike
Mike
#8
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: maintenence advice
The manufacturer recommendations for oil changes are getting more and more
infrequent. The mfr's are under the gun of the government. The largest
producer of waste oil and the largest consumer of oil in this country is
cars. The mfr's were given a choice. Either produce engines with the
metallurgy and recirculatory systems that can go further between oil changes
or the government will mandate for them. Hence, you see the changes in the
time between oil changes. The engine oil mfr's also have produced longer
lasting, cleaner lubricants. All these together have produced longer oil
change intervals.
As for synthetic vs. mineral, I believe that until the price of synthetic
comes down, the difference in price gives you no advantage considering the
highly refined and high quality dino oils produced today. Usually the price
of a synthetic oil change is near double of a dino oil change. I don't think
it will last twice as long. IMHO, I don't see any advantage. In the years to
come, we will probably be utilizing more blends of synthetic/dino and
probably full synthetic in later years.
As for your two cars, I think a happy medium would be to either split your
mileage recommendation in half or go to two-thirds.
----- Original Message -----
From: "riplead" <jhalma@comcast.net>
Newsgroups: alt.autos.honda
Sent: Saturday, April 30, 2005 1:12 AM
Subject: maintenence advice
> Hi,
>
> I'm new to this group, but I'm a Honda fan.
>
> I had to trade in my '94 Civic last august when I think I blew a head
> gasket. It needed some other somewhat expensive work also. It only had
86k.
> That sucked.
>
> Anyway, my wife has a 2002 Accord Special Edition (it's sweet) and I got
> myself a 2004 Accord Sedan (4 cyl.).
>
> I am very happy with it, and want to take good care of it.
> I noticed in the owner's manual it says to change the oil every 7k. As far
> as I know, common practice for oil changes is 3k. I don't really drive it
> that hard, but I am racking the miles driving to work. I'm driving
70-75mph
> on the highway going with the flow. It's up to 15k in less than a year, so
I
> don't know if that justifies more frequent service.
>
> Any tips would be appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
>
> John
infrequent. The mfr's are under the gun of the government. The largest
producer of waste oil and the largest consumer of oil in this country is
cars. The mfr's were given a choice. Either produce engines with the
metallurgy and recirculatory systems that can go further between oil changes
or the government will mandate for them. Hence, you see the changes in the
time between oil changes. The engine oil mfr's also have produced longer
lasting, cleaner lubricants. All these together have produced longer oil
change intervals.
As for synthetic vs. mineral, I believe that until the price of synthetic
comes down, the difference in price gives you no advantage considering the
highly refined and high quality dino oils produced today. Usually the price
of a synthetic oil change is near double of a dino oil change. I don't think
it will last twice as long. IMHO, I don't see any advantage. In the years to
come, we will probably be utilizing more blends of synthetic/dino and
probably full synthetic in later years.
As for your two cars, I think a happy medium would be to either split your
mileage recommendation in half or go to two-thirds.
----- Original Message -----
From: "riplead" <jhalma@comcast.net>
Newsgroups: alt.autos.honda
Sent: Saturday, April 30, 2005 1:12 AM
Subject: maintenence advice
> Hi,
>
> I'm new to this group, but I'm a Honda fan.
>
> I had to trade in my '94 Civic last august when I think I blew a head
> gasket. It needed some other somewhat expensive work also. It only had
86k.
> That sucked.
>
> Anyway, my wife has a 2002 Accord Special Edition (it's sweet) and I got
> myself a 2004 Accord Sedan (4 cyl.).
>
> I am very happy with it, and want to take good care of it.
> I noticed in the owner's manual it says to change the oil every 7k. As far
> as I know, common practice for oil changes is 3k. I don't really drive it
> that hard, but I am racking the miles driving to work. I'm driving
70-75mph
> on the highway going with the flow. It's up to 15k in less than a year, so
I
> don't know if that justifies more frequent service.
>
> Any tips would be appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
>
> John
#9
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: maintenence advice
I learned years ago (with Mercedes that I owned) that the dealers "goose up"
recommended services and even go as far as printing supplemental "service
manuals" that LOOK like factory publications.
Your observation is correct. Most of the high-priced 15,000 services are
glorified oil changes. Go thru the owner's manual and see what THE
MANUFACTURER really recommends at 15000 miles. The visual inspection stuff
you can eyeball yourself. Then have your dealer (or independent) do YOUR
list of what you really want done. And again, at 15,000 miles it's usually
just an oil change and maybe a tire rotation and air filter change.
I found that if you do this and keep a good file of receipts, you will still
get the same resale value as if you did all the hyped-inflated-price stuff.
Or if you keep the vehicle for the long haul (in which case resale value is
moot), it will last as long as the hyped service.
"riplead" <jhalma@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:dMudnR2-SeAvju7fRVn-ow@comcast.com...
> Hi,
>
> I'm new to this group, but I'm a Honda fan.
>
> I had to trade in my '94 Civic last august when I think I blew a head
> gasket. It needed some other somewhat expensive work also. It only had
> 86k. That sucked.
>
> Anyway, my wife has a 2002 Accord Special Edition (it's sweet) and I got
> myself a 2004 Accord Sedan (4 cyl.).
>
> I am very happy with it, and want to take good care of it.
> I noticed in the owner's manual it says to change the oil every 7k. As far
> as I know, common practice for oil changes is 3k. I don't really drive it
> that hard, but I am racking the miles driving to work. I'm driving
> 70-75mph on the highway going with the flow. It's up to 15k in less than a
> year, so I don't know if that justifies more frequent service.
>
> Any tips would be appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
>
> John
>
recommended services and even go as far as printing supplemental "service
manuals" that LOOK like factory publications.
Your observation is correct. Most of the high-priced 15,000 services are
glorified oil changes. Go thru the owner's manual and see what THE
MANUFACTURER really recommends at 15000 miles. The visual inspection stuff
you can eyeball yourself. Then have your dealer (or independent) do YOUR
list of what you really want done. And again, at 15,000 miles it's usually
just an oil change and maybe a tire rotation and air filter change.
I found that if you do this and keep a good file of receipts, you will still
get the same resale value as if you did all the hyped-inflated-price stuff.
Or if you keep the vehicle for the long haul (in which case resale value is
moot), it will last as long as the hyped service.
"riplead" <jhalma@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:dMudnR2-SeAvju7fRVn-ow@comcast.com...
> Hi,
>
> I'm new to this group, but I'm a Honda fan.
>
> I had to trade in my '94 Civic last august when I think I blew a head
> gasket. It needed some other somewhat expensive work also. It only had
> 86k. That sucked.
>
> Anyway, my wife has a 2002 Accord Special Edition (it's sweet) and I got
> myself a 2004 Accord Sedan (4 cyl.).
>
> I am very happy with it, and want to take good care of it.
> I noticed in the owner's manual it says to change the oil every 7k. As far
> as I know, common practice for oil changes is 3k. I don't really drive it
> that hard, but I am racking the miles driving to work. I'm driving
> 70-75mph on the highway going with the flow. It's up to 15k in less than a
> year, so I don't know if that justifies more frequent service.
>
> Any tips would be appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
>
> John
>
#11
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: maintenence advice
In article <1-WdnQAxLsKwnuvfRVn-qQ@comcast.com>, "D.D. Palmer"
<ddpalmer@hotmail.com> wrote:
> I learned years ago (with Mercedes that I owned) that the dealers "goose up"
> recommended services and even go as far as printing supplemental "service
> manuals" that LOOK like factory publications.
>
> Your observation is correct. Most of the high-priced 15,000 services are
> glorified oil changes. Go thru the owner's manual and see what THE
> MANUFACTURER really recommends at 15000 miles. The visual inspection stuff
> you can eyeball yourself. Then have your dealer (or independent) do YOUR
> list of what you really want done. And again, at 15,000 miles it's usually
> just an oil change and maybe a tire rotation and air filter change.
>
> I found that if you do this and keep a good file of receipts, you will still
> get the same resale value as if you did all the hyped-inflated-price stuff.
> Or if you keep the vehicle for the long haul (in which case resale value is
> moot), it will last as long as the hyped service.
Thanks for your comment. It's my opinion that the owners and operators of
car companies like Honda and Mercedes are in business to sell as many new
cars as they can sell. It's for this reason they write in owner's manuals
such things that the first tune up should be done at 100,000 miles and the
oil should be changed every 15,000 miles. If you plan to keep your car for
two or three years--follow the advice in the owner's manual. However, if
you plan to keep the car for 5 or more years, change the oil every 3,000
miles and get a tune up at least every 50,000 miles (or less).
--
NEWSGROUP SUBSCRIBERS MOTTO
We respect those subscribers that ask for advice or provide advice.
We do NOT respect the subscribers that enjoy criticizing people.
<ddpalmer@hotmail.com> wrote:
> I learned years ago (with Mercedes that I owned) that the dealers "goose up"
> recommended services and even go as far as printing supplemental "service
> manuals" that LOOK like factory publications.
>
> Your observation is correct. Most of the high-priced 15,000 services are
> glorified oil changes. Go thru the owner's manual and see what THE
> MANUFACTURER really recommends at 15000 miles. The visual inspection stuff
> you can eyeball yourself. Then have your dealer (or independent) do YOUR
> list of what you really want done. And again, at 15,000 miles it's usually
> just an oil change and maybe a tire rotation and air filter change.
>
> I found that if you do this and keep a good file of receipts, you will still
> get the same resale value as if you did all the hyped-inflated-price stuff.
> Or if you keep the vehicle for the long haul (in which case resale value is
> moot), it will last as long as the hyped service.
Thanks for your comment. It's my opinion that the owners and operators of
car companies like Honda and Mercedes are in business to sell as many new
cars as they can sell. It's for this reason they write in owner's manuals
such things that the first tune up should be done at 100,000 miles and the
oil should be changed every 15,000 miles. If you plan to keep your car for
two or three years--follow the advice in the owner's manual. However, if
you plan to keep the car for 5 or more years, change the oil every 3,000
miles and get a tune up at least every 50,000 miles (or less).
--
NEWSGROUP SUBSCRIBERS MOTTO
We respect those subscribers that ask for advice or provide advice.
We do NOT respect the subscribers that enjoy criticizing people.
#12
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: maintenence advice
"Jason" <jason@nospam.com> wrote in message
news:jason-0605050931170001@pm1-broad-74.snlo.dialup.fix.net...
> Thanks for your comment. It's my opinion that the owners and operators of
> car companies like Honda and Mercedes are in business to sell as many new
> cars as they can sell. It's for this reason they write in owner's manuals
> such things that the first tune up should be done at 100,000 miles and the
> oil should be changed every 15,000 miles. If you plan to keep your car for
> two or three years--follow the advice in the owner's manual. However, if
> you plan to keep the car for 5 or more years, change the oil every 3,000
> miles and get a tune up at least every 50,000 miles (or less).
The only people suggesting 3000 mile oil changes are people that sell oil.
#13
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: maintenence advice
Read the owners manual and follow. the other crap is about revenue.
One recommendation use only Honda fuels they have special additives and no
other fuels work quite as good. Use Honda oil filters with a new washer
tighten with a torque wrench do not ,do not over-tighten.
One recommendation use only Honda fuels they have special additives and no
other fuels work quite as good. Use Honda oil filters with a new washer
tighten with a torque wrench do not ,do not over-tighten.
#14
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: maintenence advice
Read the owners manual and follow. the other crap is about revenue.
One recommendation use only Honda fuels they have special additives and no
other fuels work quite as good. Use Honda oil filters with a new washer
tighten with a torque wrench do not ,do not over-tighten.
One recommendation use only Honda fuels they have special additives and no
other fuels work quite as good. Use Honda oil filters with a new washer
tighten with a torque wrench do not ,do not over-tighten.
#15
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: maintenence advice
"magix23" <buleak@verizon.net> wrote in
news:6lbie.2800$BF5.2421@trndny06:
> Read the owners manual and follow. the other crap is about revenue.
>
> One recommendation use only Honda fuels they have special additives
> and no other fuels work quite as good.
Honda "fuels"...?
What?
--
TeGGeR®
The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
www.tegger.com/hondafaq/
news:6lbie.2800$BF5.2421@trndny06:
> Read the owners manual and follow. the other crap is about revenue.
>
> One recommendation use only Honda fuels they have special additives
> and no other fuels work quite as good.
Honda "fuels"...?
What?
--
TeGGeR®
The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
www.tegger.com/hondafaq/