Sludge

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by dj_richardv, Jun 1, 2005.

  1. dj_richardv

    Robert Meyer Guest

    Low enough I'm not going to worry about it...

    SpongeBob
     
    Robert Meyer, Jun 3, 2005
    #21
  2. dj_richardv

    Bob Shuman Guest

    My family owns 5 vehicles. I change the oil on them all every 3K miles and
    purchase oil and filters by the case during sales. I keep excellent records
    on dates, mileage, etc. but could not show you a single receipt that shows
    an oil related purchase if asked. I could probably produce some charge card
    receipts from the local auto parts stores, but many times my oil purchases
    come from the large discount retailers when they offer better prices.

    My 2.7L is now at 4 years and about 45K miles, so I am past the warranty
    period so this matters little now anyway, but my point is that there are
    likely many Chrysler customers who do their own oil changes that won't have
    receipts. I am hoping the engine will make another 6 years to reach 100K+
    miles. Based on input from Bill P, I've begun to use 8 ounces of MMO with
    every oil change.

    Bob

    engine
     
    Bob Shuman, Jun 3, 2005
    #22
  3. dj_richardv

    maxpower Guest

    Just change the oil at regular intervals, forget all the after market crap,
    save you money and take your family out to dinner on it. The biggest cause
    of engine damage is lack of oil changes period
     
    maxpower, Jun 3, 2005
    #23
  4. dj_richardv

    Bob Shuman Guest

    I've been driving for some 31+ years now and never experienced a major
    internal engine failure on any vehicle I've owned. I generally have never
    burned much oil either, although back in the 1970's I owned some Chevy Vegas
    with the Aluminum 2.3L engine blocks that consumed a quart or two between
    changes. I just think based on what I've seen, read, and heard that the 2.7L
    is a weak engine and is very much prone to sludge build up. That's is why I
    was interested in the original poster's maintenance history. (It was not
    provided that I saw...)

    I will continue to do what I've been doing ... The MMO treatment is only on
    this vehicle with the 2.7L since I felt it was cheap insurance.

    Bob
     
    Bob Shuman, Jun 3, 2005
    #24
  5. Gee, *there's* a ringing endorsement...not.
     
    Daniel J. Stern, Jun 3, 2005
    #25
  6. dj_richardv

    maxpower Guest

    Ramble on child
     
    maxpower, Jun 3, 2005
    #26
  7. dj_richardv

    maxpower Guest

    Acually Chrysler doesnt recommend any kind of additives added to the engine
    oil
     
    maxpower, Jun 3, 2005
    #27
  8. dj_richardv

    Steve Guest

    But that also begs the question of what, exactly, is "proper
    maintenance." Yes, its following the recommended service procedures, but
    a GOOD engine should be able to tolerate a certain amount of abuse over
    its lifespan without ill effect. If you have to coddle an engine to get
    a reasonable life out of it, its not a "good" design. And running
    synthetic oil on a 3000 mile change interval (as some do with the 2.7)
    is MAJOR coddling in my opinion. Our 3.5 has run 220,000 miles on ~9000
    mile oil change intervals (synthetic) with nothing more than timing
    belts, 2 water pumps, fuel injector O-rings, and one set of lower intake
    gaskets, and my old 318 has gone further than that with LESS meticulous
    care.
     
    Steve, Jun 3, 2005
    #28
  9. dj_richardv

    Bill Putney Guest

    I doubt if anyone, including DC, knows (but I bet they, from some
    statistics, have a better idea than *we* do). 8^)

    I *can* say this: Some changes were made in the '00-'01 time frame for
    the specific purpose of reducing sludge buildup and improving the
    lubrication system.

    An example: You'll see posts by people on the Chrysler forums
    (primarilly www.dodgeintrepid.net) about the rubber elbow that connects
    the pipe from the valve cover to the PCV valve routinely clogging up
    (not just partially, but totally occluding) with a mixture of powdery
    and gummy soot (and the walls of the elbow itself getting gooey/gummy.
    Starting in '00 (or '01 - haven't been able to nail it down for
    certain), they redesigned the pipe to the PCV valve to include a little
    heat exchanger (an existing small coolant hose is spliced into the two
    coolant ports of the heat exchanger) to steal some heat to prevent the
    blow-by gases from condensing out in the pipe and clogging it, disabling
    the PCV system.

    Why did they do that (and other lube system improvements) if there
    weren't a (real) problem?

    (BTW - for those with earlier 2.7 engines, you might be interested in
    replacing the existing PCV pipe with the redesigned one with the heat
    exchanger - it is a drop-in replacement. I did it to mine a few weeks
    ago - DC P/N 04663792AH - $20-30. You need to replace the PCV valve at
    the same time - I recommend dealer item on that too as I've seen too
    much crap in PCV valves in the aftermarket world even from otherwise
    reputable companies like Purolator.)

    IMO...

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    adddress with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Jun 3, 2005
    #29
  10. dj_richardv

    Bill Putney Guest

    I'm flattered, Bob. 8^)

    You might take a look at my other post with time stamp similar to this
    one about the redesigned PCV pipe to prevent the PCV hose from clogging
    - you might consider getting that. Just curious: Have you ever checked
    the PCV valve hose? If so, what did that elbow look like inside - the
    one that plugs right into the PCV valve?

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    adddress with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Jun 3, 2005
    #30
  11. dj_richardv

    Bill Putney Guest

    Sorry Max, but Chrysler (the people who recommend 7,500 mile oil changes
    in these cars) has very low credibility when it comes to this engine. I
    can almost guarantee that with 7,500 mile oil changes and operating
    conditions well within the Schedule A maintenance criteria, a large
    number of these engines would fail by 80,000 miles. I have also seen
    first-hand posts of owners who claim to have presented all oil change
    receipts showing they met the letter of the "law" on oil changes, and DC
    refused to help with engine repair/replacement within the warranty
    period. Their reasoning (paraphrasing): "We don't consider that there
    is such a thing as a Schedule A driving condition. By default, we make
    all of our judgements based on Schedule B. Request for help denied."

    Fact is, this is exactly the kind of problem that certain additives
    (MMO, Sea Foam) will help with. BTW - you ought to try the DC anti-foam
    additive that DC recommends against using. It improves 42LE shifting
    without creating problems. Hmm - I wonder why they carry it?

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    adddress with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Jun 4, 2005
    #31
  12. dj_richardv

    Bill Putney Guest

    For those interested, I posted some photos of the redesigned PCV valve
    hose on DI.net:
    http://www.dodgeintrepid.net/forums/showthread.php?t=54772&page=1&pp=15

    Scroll about half-way down the first page of that thread (I'm Peva
    there) to the post where the photos are. Since that thread, I have
    actually installed the new hose with heat exchanger - just haven't
    posted the post-install photos. Might get around to it some day. The
    install was 10 minutes - plug-n-play, perfect fit.

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    adddress with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Jun 4, 2005
    #32
  13. dj_richardv

    Bill Putney Guest


    And here's an earlier thread on DI.net in which I and a few others are
    quite by accident stumbling onto the addition of the heat exchanger in
    later years of LH cars:
    http://www.dodgeintrepid.net/forums/showthread.php?t=53111&page=1&pp=15

    Three pages of discussion, head, scratching, etc., but a 'Eureka!!'
    ending. Good reading if you have trouble sleeping tonight. 8^)

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    adddress with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Jun 4, 2005
    #33
  14. dj_richardv

    Geno Guest

    .... Are you married? How many kids do you have? You have pets? Which one is
    your favorite? Does your wife snore?
     
    Geno, Jun 4, 2005
    #34
  15. dj_richardv

    maxpower Guest

    No need to apoligize again. I am posting what I have been told by Chrysler
    and their TSB's.
     
    maxpower, Jun 4, 2005
    #35
  16. dj_richardv

    Bill Putney Guest

    The answer is knowing when they are conveying useful, accurate info. and
    when they are F.O.S. On this subject they are absolutely F.O.S.
    (because they are covering their legal and financial butts).

    It is totally conceivable that they have blanket statements of "no
    additives" peppered throughout their documentation at the insistence of
    their lawyers and MBA's so that they can deny warranty claims if an
    additive were used. Wouldn't put it past them one bit.

    IOW - "We're not going to admit a problem, we're not going to tell you
    what we know to be the root causes of the problem so that you can take
    pre-emptive action on your own, we'll not recommend or require the use
    of synthetic oil like some of our competitors with similar problems have
    done because jeopardize any legal case if it came to that (admission of
    a problem), we'll put out b.s. publicity information (mis-applied and
    meaningless/incomplete statistics about numbers of complaints on the
    problem) to hide the problem while in the background we're making
    internal design changes to correct the "non-problem" so we can use it on
    our new line of vehicles, we'll try to use any excuse we can to deny a
    claim if it fails, and if you do anything on your own to try to avoid a
    failure, like using additives, and it still fails, we'll use that as an
    excuse not to pay too."

    Did I leave anything out?

    And once again, I'm very , very sorry! 8^)

    Bill Putney
    (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my
    adddress with the letter 'x')
     
    Bill Putney, Jun 4, 2005
    #36
  17. dj_richardv

    maxpower Guest

    Once again, no need to be sorry.. As I said, The dealer reps inform us to
    not use additives, they do not want us putting MOA or any other additves in
    the engine oil. I believe the biggest reason was because it caused emissions
    component to fail prematurely and that some owners thought it would extend
    the oil changes to twice that was recommended . As I said, this is what I
    was told, Im sure Lite bulb Stern willl put his 2 cents in on this and then
    hide under his rock again
     
    maxpower, Jun 4, 2005
    #37
  18. ....And does your chewing gum lose its flavour on the bedpost overnight?
     
    Daniel J. Stern, Jun 4, 2005
    #38
  19. dj_richardv

    Guest Guest

    What percentage of engines ARE properly maintained? Sticking to
    "american" brands, I'd say significantly below 25% With the imports,
    for the first 5 years, likely closer to 40%. Some brands significantly
    higher, in some areas.
    When I was Toyota service manager, something like 50% were
    consistently within time/mileage for the driving type experienced,
    25%, more or less were within the "regular" schedule and should have
    been extreme, and possibly 25% went significantly over either by time
    or mileage on a fairly regular basis. Numbers mabee closer to 50, 40
    and 10. - but I drilled the importance of mainenance into the owners'
    heads relatively effectively.

    I agree though, that a PROPERLY maintained engine would be extremely
    unlikely to die due to coking/sludge.
     
    Guest, Jun 5, 2005
    #39
  20. dj_richardv

    Bob Shuman Guest

    Bill,

    My Intrepid is an '01 with abut 45K. I've only had it a year now, but know
    the maintenance history since it came from my next door neighbor. I've not
    had the PCV off yet to take a look. Based on your comments, mine may
    already have the redesigned tube.

    Bob
     
    Bob Shuman, Jun 5, 2005
    #40
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