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Thread: 20k service on new 90 is too long

  1. #41
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    Quote Originally Posted by uninformed View Post
    imagine if it was hot dusty and humid.....but im just being silly, never has Australian conditions tested a vehicles reliability.

    Hey Dougal, you should move to the Gold Coast, youd fit right in with the 50, 000 Kiwi's that all tell us daily how great NZ is and everything is bigger, better and harder over there
    You can keep that lot. We don't miss them and we sure as hell don't need them back.

    Yes Australia is dusty, but that's a concern for the filtration. It only affects the oil if the filtration has alread failed.
    Yes Australia is hot, but that's a concern for the cooling system. Like the dust, the oil is only affected if the cooling system can't keep up. Not being cold and damp means a lot less condensation and few problems with moisture in the oil.

    It is far worse for an engine to never get up to operating temperature. Short runs in a cold and damp climate.

  2. #42
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    so oil and the design of its system doesnt play a roll in cooling, and therefore how much that would effect the break down of oil.....

  3. #43
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    Quote Originally Posted by uninformed View Post
    so oil and the design of its system doesnt play a roll in cooling, and therefore how much that would effect the break down of oil.....
    Of course it does. But if you aren't overheating it, then it's all working as intended.

  4. #44
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dougal View Post

    Australia doesn't have harsh conditions for cars. It's warm, flat and pretty dry.


  5. #45
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dougal View Post
    Of course it does. But if you aren't overheating it, then it's all working as intended.
    I feel we could be going in circles here.....since the system is designed as a whole, Im sure any engine builder takes both coolant and oil systems in to count for total cooling and if they feel their system is fine, then job done. Again, it wouldnt be the first time that a system has been tested in Oz.

    What is the sump capacity of the Tdci?

  6. #46
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    Quote Originally Posted by uninformed View Post
    What is the sump capacity of the Tdci?
    No idea, but someone here will tell me.
    My Isuzu was around 7 litres. Now 6. 16,000km intervals in a truck at 8T gross back in 1985.
    My 2.2 tdi nissan work car is about 5 litres and 20,000km intervals. It is a 1.4 ton car though, not a 2.2T rover. It's not commonrail so doesn't run as clean as newer engines.

  7. #47
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    Current Peugeot/Citroën diesels only have a 5 litre sump and call for 20,000km OCI's with a low SAPS, full synthetic 5W-30 ACEA C2 oil.
    These are fuel economy oils designed to protect the DPF and cat.

    I think an ACEA E4/E6/E9 10W-40 oil (low SAPS so safe for the cat and DPF) may find it's way into the sump
    I'm a little concerned with TBN retention with some of these low sulphated ash oils over 20,000km in city/stop start/short trip use, although it'd probably be fine where we are, it gets mostly 30km highway runs.

    It only gets down to -7*C here so not too cold, a 10W will be fine at 5:45AM and it's pretty dry too, one of the drier areas of Oz, although I think our average annual rainfall is double of where Dougal lives, but to be fair he is in the driest part of NZ

  8. #48
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    Quote Originally Posted by rick130 View Post
    It only gets down to -7*C here so not too cold, a 10W will be fine at 5:45AM and it's pretty dry too, one of the drier areas of Oz, although I think our average annual rainfall is double of where Dougal lives, but to be fair he is in the driest part of NZ
    I lived in one of the wettest towns for a few years. 2.5m a year. It got wetter out of the towns and closer to the hills.
    Here vehicles last forever. There they would completely disappear into a mound of rust flakes over the engine block.

    I had to run 5w30 in that nissan. Hydraulic chain tensioners wouldn't play ball in cold winter starts. But I have a spare engine anyway.

  9. #49
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    The wettest area in Oz I think is around Tully, somewhere above 3.3m/year.

    Up where Roverrescue/Steve is I think it's just under 2m/year.

    It's in the tropics, it's wet.

    I'm guessing the west coast of Tassie is like the South Islands west coast, cold and wet, but not too many live there.

  10. #50
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    Pike River Mine got 6m of rain a year. Terrible place to get anything done. The number of bike rides and excursions I'd have planned, then cancelled with rain.

    The west coast is really temperate. Usually 10-20C daily highs, but the humidity kills you. The heat-pump in my office wasn't set to "cool", it was set to "dry".
    Perfect rusting conditions. You can watch rust grow on tools and parts inside your house. Park a car outside and you can see the salt streaks on the windscreen.

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