What's your opinion? Vote now: Every track day, Every 1000-3000mi, Every 3000-6000mi, Every 6000-9000mi, Whatever the manual says, You have to change the oil?, 10000mi, Every 6 mont...
Just a poll to get some interaction in! Everyone has an opinion on this...what's yours?
Sorry to be a dick but this is kind of a terrible poll. The 3 most common intervals are 3k, 5k, and 10k. One is not represented. One is represented by 2 different options and 2 of them are represented by the same option.
Every 3,000-3,750 miles. HyunKia GDI 4-cylinders are dirty little engines and the "severe" schedule of 3,000 (2.0T), 3,750 (2.4L/3.3L) applies in "rare" driving conditions such traffic in hot weather, very cold weather, hills, <5 mile trips, stop/go traffic, etc.
Not if you drive a pure EV Kona, Niro or Ioniq! People found out poor reduction gearbox design means it fouls up it's gear oil rapidly (compared to say, a Bolt which does not do that) and periodic changes are necessary - or at least one done early in it's break-in period. (Not to be confused with the hybrid versions of those three or the Ioniq 5 and 6)
Yearly on my mustang. Never put more than 5k miles a year on it. Gti gets it every 10k, or yearly. Might drop the interval now that it’s mostly city driving.
Pretty bad poll. Lots of cars can go longer than the options listed. I change mine every 20,000 km which is Mercedes recommended interval in Canada (when the car tells me to change my oil).
Or a lawnmower. Personally, I change my push mower’s oil every 3,000 miles /s
Edit: I did the math for this, actually. For one acre of land, assuming you had a 4ft wide push mower, it would take about 2.05 miles of walking per acre of land, for complete coverage, with no overlap. I prefer to do a 25% overlap though, so let’s increase that to 3 miles per acre at most.
This means you would need to do 1,000 acres of push mowing before changing the oil in a push mower at this rate. This is about 757 American football fields, 1.56 square miles, or about yay big: https://i.postimg.cc/qRrfdqdn/IMG-1199.jpg