Engines that are prone to sludge

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by Built_Well, Jul 25, 2008.

  1. Yeah, I remember years ago a hidden camera news program caught a shop
    just wiped clean the oil filter and claimed to have completed an oil
    change.

    Maybe that's what some Toyota dealers do anyway, because some of these
    sludged up engines were maintained at the dealers.\

    Changing the oil filter frequently will do a lot of good for your engine,
    but reducing sludge by way of filter is minimal. The main sludge culprets
    are poor ventilation, condensation plus oil = Sludge. Keeping your engine
    Positive crankcase ventalition system open and clean will reduce sludge
    conciderably.
    Diddly
     
    dale_peterson, Jul 28, 2008
    #21
  2. Built_Well

    Bill Putney Guest

    As well as get the moisture out of the exhaust. Exhaust system
    materials have improved greatly over the years, but not too many years
    ago, vehicles driven on lots of short trips will need most of their
    downstream exhaust components replaced every 2 to 3 years, whereas the
    same car driven mostly highway would go with the original exhaust system
    for most of its life. It's not unusual for today's exhaust systems to
    last the life of the vehicle (250+k miles) in mostly highway use.
     
    Bill Putney, Jul 28, 2008
    #22
  3. Built_Well

    Bill Putney Guest

    I wasn't aware of that, but that would be due to things like forgetting
    to refill after the drain, or refilling without the drain plug having
    been re-installed - on two separate occasions, I was in a local shop
    getting some pricing, and another person was in there getting a quote
    for a new engine due to the local WalMart having left the oil drain plug
    out.

    There would of course not be the immediate or even detectable effect of
    simply charging the customer for work not done, which seems to be the
    policy of *many* places as in "hey - what the customer doesn't know
    won't hurt them - if the customer doesn't know, what's the harm?"
    out-right fraud mentality.
     
    Bill Putney, Jul 28, 2008
    #23
  4. Built_Well

    ACAR Guest

     
    ACAR, Jul 28, 2008
    #24
  5. Built_Well

    HLS Guest

    Exhause systems really do outlast the old ones substantially. Many of us
    tend to
    forget how they used to rust out. Improved materials have helped this
    problem
    a lot. (Wonder how the manufacturers allowed this to happen :>)
     
    HLS, Jul 28, 2008
    #25
  6. Built_Well

    Some O Guest

    Before a change I scratch the oil filter and look at the oil color.
    After I can quickly observe if the job was done.
    Once when buying a new Chrysler I marked it's dead battery so I would
    know if they changed it as requested in the deal. They didn't, but did
    after I caught them cheating.

    It's unbelievable that a Chrysler dealer would practice this oil change
    fraud, but there are cheats everywhere.
    I no longer have my Chrysler dealer do my regular oil changes, they
    scared me with their overly strong desire to sell me a replacement for
    my '95 Concorde that runs like a top.
     
    Some O, Jul 29, 2008
    #26
  7. Built_Well

    rob Guest


    hey.gotta love the 90s concordes. my old 94 was one of the most dependable
    cars I've ever had.
     
    rob, Jul 29, 2008
    #27
  8. Built_Well

    johngdole Guest

    Here is a post from a RX300 owner. This and 3 others on the lot had
    sludged up engines and oil was changed by LEXUS every 4000 miles !!!
    These engine designs stink.

    lexusownersclub.com
    IBuild
    Mar 4 2007, 11:19 AM
    Car Model:2000 rx-300
    Location:south carolina

    Thanks, I have the car at the lexus dealer and they did a inspection
    and informed me that the engine was locked-up,due to oil sludge. I
    summited all my oil change recepts and my lexus service recepts(every
    4000 miles). The service manager informed me that he had to turn in
    all of findings to the Atlanta office,and they would decide on the
    repair. The service manager told me from what he saw there sould not
    be any reason why Lexus will not replace the engine at thier cost. The
    down side of this is that he also told me that the repair would take
    48 to 60 days and lexus would not allow me a rental car for use during
    the repair, i could rent a car and after the repair i could turn in
    the cost and Lexus may or may not reinburst me for the rental. There
    is suppose to be 3 other rx-300's at the same dealership waiting for
    parts ahead of me for the same repairs. If ANYONE has any suggestions
    that may help me through this please let me know!!!!!!!!
     
    johngdole, Jul 29, 2008
    #28
  9. Built_Well

    Bill Putney Guest

    Makes you wonder if the oil was really being changed at that particular
    dealership? They should be able to compare the problems on cars
    serviced at that dealership with cars serviced at other dealerships and
    come to conclusions about that pretty readily. If engines are truly
    failing like that when being serviced regularly, then - yeah - it is a
    poor design. But I have to wonder about the service that they really
    got. Unbelievable how much credence these manufacturers are putting in
    paper documentation.

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    address with the letter 'x')


     
    Bill Putney, Jul 29, 2008
    #29
  10. Built_Well

    holycow Guest

    Bill, I used to be a Rep for Chrysler and back in 2003 we had a meeting with
    Walker exhaust. Talking with the engineer, he stated that because the
    exhaust system is aluminized or treated with stainless, people think there
    exhaust last the lifetime of vehicle. He then said the actually engineer
    them to onliy a liife of 80,000 miles. He said the mufflers are shot on the
    inside. They study the used exhaust by buying them at scrap yards. Good- old
    Tenneco. By the way. Chrysler determined the PVC system was causing a sludge
    condition, and redesigned it in the later 2.7. I think it was in 02 or 03.
     
    holycow, Jul 30, 2008
    #30
  11. Built_Well

    C-BODY Guest

    From somewhere in the later 1970s, possibly when catalytic converters
    started putting more heat into the exhaust system, the manufacturers
    started using piping with more stainless steel content rather than just
    "steel" as they had been. In more recent times, the pipes look like
    they have more stainless content in them than they did 10 years ago . .
    from the exhaust manifold back. No more greasy hands from handling
    them, either, when new.

    C-BODY
     
    C-BODY, Jul 30, 2008
    #31
  12. Built_Well

    C-BODY Guest

    Back when I was in college in the earlier 1970s, I found the SAE
    Journals in the university library. I started pouring over these books
    and found lots of interesting and neat "papers" in there. Even the
    original paper the Chrysler engineers did when they introduced the B/RB
    engine in 1958, which told all about the engine.

    In the papers I found which were presented in the earlier 1960s, one was
    by some GM engineers who were studying the effects of crankcase
    ventilation on sludge issues. For the tests, they had a fleet of plant
    security cars (1961 Chevy Biscayne or BelAir sedans with the 235 cid 6
    cylinder engines). They adapted the road draft tube to be a closed
    ventilation system, recycling the crankcase gasses back to the base of
    the carb. They used one pcv valve flow rate as the baseline and also
    did one with double that flow rate. These cars usually idled around
    with no highway miles as such, therefore they were known to build sludge
    in the valve covers. It was also somewhat common for the road draft
    tubes to get gunked-up on normal cars that saw a good deal of city
    miles, too.

    Adding the dedicated ventilation to the crankcase did decrease sludge
    buildup. Doubling the flow rate decreased it still more, so they could
    then determine the more optimum flow rate with these two tests. Later
    vehicles were coverted to the pcv systems until they became production
    items in about 1967.

    With the addition on the pcv systems, the carb calibrations usually
    needed a little finessing as the pcv valve is a variable controled
    vacuum "leak" of sorts.

    I recall reading of several class action suits against Toyota for engine
    sludge issues in the 1990s. As it was "Toyota", this was page 15 news,
    but if it had been Chrysler, it would have been page 2 news, I suspect.
    It's interesting that they are still having these issues with Lexus,
    even! Seems like they initially tried to claim it was an owner
    maintenance issue, but finally had to admit it was THEIR issue and make
    ammends.

    Mercedes had some issues about 5 years ago with failed engines. It had
    to do with the type of oil being used and when it was changed. ALL of
    the "longlife" or "extended drain intervals" with VW/Audi and BMW are
    spec'd for synthetic oil rather than dino. Most of what they sell at
    the dealerships is Castrol, with some being a Euro-spec Castrol that you
    don't generally find at the auto supplies.

    When GM introduced the current generation TrailBlazer vehicles, they
    also introduced their algorithm-based oil life system. The oil change
    light comes on related to vehicle use rather than just a mileage
    interval. With short trips and little highway miles, it comes on pretty
    soon (probably at about 2500 miles or so), but with more highway miles
    in warmer weather, it can stretch things out to up to 15K miles. All of
    the research they did on that system was done with normal motor oil.

    I have an '80 Chrysler with the 360 2bbl V-8. If I drove it with
    shorter trips during the cooler months of the year, the pcv hose would
    get gunked up and it would idle flaky. I have even pulled out the
    dipstick and found milky residue at the handle end, but normal color in
    the oil. It's a known fact that the Chrylser A-blocks are "cool
    running" engines compared to the B/RB engines. In the summer time, the
    milky stuff didn't happen. When I put a new pcv hose on it (pcv valve
    to the back of the carb), I'd try to get enough of it such that the hose
    would not droop in the back and remain more level so the gunk would not
    settle out in the low section.

    On the Quad 4 GM engine family, they don't use a pcv valve, but a vapor
    separator instead. The orifice that controls the pcv rate is elsewhere
    near the throttle body of the FI system. In that separator is a length
    of flat and thick copper with an electric wire going to it. Obviously
    to help control moisture buildup in the separator box.

    Obviously, Amsoil is trying to sell their product to owners of the
    targeted vehicles. Seeming to be performing a public service at the
    same time?

    In reading the maintenance schedule in the owner's manual, more times
    than not, "normal" use is really "severe use" (as determined by trip
    length and such). Some also consider the 3000 mile oil changes as "too
    much maintenance", but they tend to not admit to the fact that people
    used to have somebody look under the hood and check the oil with EVERY
    tank of gas. That earlier attention probably saved many from engine
    repairs later on . . . unlike more modern times when people typically
    don't look under the hood at all.

    In the 1990s, Walker Exhaust touted their "rust-out free" muffler. I
    got one for my '67 Chrysler as it came with a lifetime warranty. What
    they did was to put an absorbent coating on the floor of the muffler,
    inside it, to absorb moisture and hold it until it could get cooked out
    with a more fully warmed up engine. Of course, those older Chrysler
    mufflers had drain holes, too, at the back lower seam.

    One reason for the oil sludge problem probably decreasing is the better
    oil specs of modern oils in resisting sludging in the first place. As
    things have progressed, most of the normal oils are probably more
    semi-synthetic than many might like to admit.

    Just some thoughts and observations,

    C-BODY
     
    C-BODY, Jul 30, 2008
    #32
  13. Built_Well

    ben91932 Guest

    This is exactly why Midas and Mienecke had to resort to brakes and
    shocks to stay in business.
    HTH,
    Ben
     
    ben91932, Jul 30, 2008
    #33
  14. Built_Well

    Bill Putney Guest

    Yeah - hah! The "screw the consumer" philosophy works great until your
    competition or the original manufacturer starts using a "make it last
    the life of the car" philosophy, in which case the "screw the consumer"
    company deserves a huge downturn in business. He who has the last laugh...

    By the way. Chrysler determined the PVC system was causing a sludge
    They added a heat exchanger to the pcv hose (steals heat from the heater
    loop) to keep the blowby from condensing out into the hose and
    clogging it up - that was in '00 or '01 - I added that heat exchanger to
    my '99 Concorde. They may have done some internal things too for better
    breathing. It's hard to tell from the LH car forums if the '01-'04 2.7
    is less prone to the problem, but I haven't heard anything on the later
    platform that uses the 2.7 as its base engine, and I think they've been
    out long enough to where they'd be getting failures if that were the
    case (60-80k miles is the usual failure window) - probably means they
    fixed the problem.

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    address with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Jul 30, 2008
    #34
  15. Built_Well

    Steve Guest

    You misspelled "Scamsoil."

    Horse shit. These engines (the A/LA v8 family of which the 3.9 v6 is a
    derivative) have been around in one form or another since 1955, and they
    DON'T sludge the oil.
     
    Steve, Aug 1, 2008
    #35
  16. Built_Well

    MoPar Man Guest

    As far as I can tell, the exhaust on my '00 300m is 100% stainless (and
    not aluminized or "treated" with stainless).

    After 8.75 years, there is no pit-through on any of the pipes, but there
    are some perforations on the rear muffler shell. There is no way I'd
    see that much life out of them if the entire system wasn't stainless
    steel.

    Walker makes shit aluminized aftermarket crap.
     
    MoPar Man, Aug 11, 2008
    #36
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