Can you Fix an Engine Burning Oil for $20

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 18 พ.ค. 2022
  • If your engine is burning oil, this could cost you a lot of time an money. Filling your engine up with oil every time you fill you car with gas is unbearable. Often times the way to fix oil burning requires your engine to be rebuilt.
    With a lot of products on the market that claim to be able to fix your engine, we test them to see if they actually work.
    We also explain the issue of low compression rings, and tear down an engine that was burning oil to find what may have caused this.
    Links Talked about in this video
    BG Dynamic Engine Restoration
    amzn.to/3LvHpXn
    Liquimoly Pro Line Engine Flush
    www.shopdap.com/pro-line-engi...
    Liquimoly Viscoplus
    www.shopdap.com/viscoplus-for...
    Ball End Triple Square Bit Set
    www.shopdap.com/ball-end-trip...
    Audi Oil Consumption Repair Set with Updated Pistons
    www.shopdap.com/finder-data/e...
    Updated 1.8t Piston
    www.shopdap.com/06l-107-065-a...
    Updated 2.0t Audi Piston
    www.shopdap.com/06h-107-065-d...
    ---------------------------------------------------
    This Video was shot at our VW and Audi Specialty Shop
    DAP Repair
    10308 Bailey Rd
    Suite 408
    Cornelius NC 28031
    goo.gl/maps/emANaqp9dMk
    ----------------------------------------------------
    Shop for VW and Audi Parts Here
    shopdap.com
    Check out our VW/Audi Shop located in Cornelius NC
    www.daprepair.com/
    More info on DAP Reward Credit
    shopdap.com/store/rewardpoint...
    VW and Audi Repair in Kent or Akron Ohio
    goo.gl/maps/sEiQ3jD49gqzfAZ59
    -------------------------------------------------------
    Time Stamps
    Intro 00:14
    Explaining the Problem and Solutions 02:05
    Performing BG Dynamic Engine Flush 04:19
    Liquimoly Engine Flush 11:50
    1.8t VW Engine Tear Down 15:27
    Oil Burning Wrap Up 23:32
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ความคิดเห็น • 1.3K

  • @Deutscheautoparts
    @Deutscheautoparts  2 ปีที่แล้ว +48

    Links for stuff in this video -
    Our Repair Shop - DAP Repair
    www.daprepair.com/
    Our VW and Audi Parts Site
    www.shopdap.com/
    BG Dynamic Engine Restoration
    amzn.to/3LvHpXn
    Liquimoly Pro Line Engine Flush
    www.shopdap.com/pro-line-engine-flush-500ml.html
    Liquimoly Viscoplus
    www.shopdap.com/viscoplus-for-engine-oil-300ml.html
    Ball End Triple Square Bit Set
    www.shopdap.com/ball-end-triple-square-set-wkztsqktball.html
    Audi Oil Consumption Repair Set with Updated Pistons
    www.shopdap.com/finder-data/engine-repair/maintenance-kits/oil-consumption-repair-kit/06h198065dmgrp.html
    Updated 1.8t Piston
    www.shopdap.com/06l-107-065-as-vw-audi.html
    Updated 2.0t Audi Piston
    www.shopdap.com/06h-107-065-dm-vw-audi.html

    • @fredygump5578
      @fredygump5578 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Is it a bad idea to use one of these products for preventitive maintenance? I have a 2016 mk7 gti w/ ~60k miles. No oil burning to speak of at the moment. I'd like to keep it that way. I'll be ordering oil an filter in a few days!

    • @benamarayoucef9402
      @benamarayoucef9402 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I sold my GTI cause of thi fu…. Burning oil 👎👎👎 I will never bay a gti

    • @8359s
      @8359s 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Was it an impersonation od that guy that has Mercedes Benz channel where you advertised the sockets?

    • @davidparker9676
      @davidparker9676 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@benamarayoucef9402 Don't blame the car, blame the EPA and the climate crisis con men and women.

    • @edwardharoldbutler7076
      @edwardharoldbutler7076 ปีที่แล้ว

      Have you tried engine restore?

  • @danielhurley7018
    @danielhurley7018 2 ปีที่แล้ว +343

    Here is the recipe to solve 2.0tfsi oil burning. Get the engine hot. Remove spark plugs, mix 2oz PB Blaster, 1oz B-12 Chemtool, and 1/2oz MMO. Pour this mix in this quantity in to each cylinder. As you pour, you'll hear the mix boiling in the cylinder. Always exercise good safety protocol. Let it sit with a paper towel in the spark plug hole until the piston is visually dry (24hrs). Take a compressed air blower with a long snout and put it in the spark plug hole and blow. You will not believe the amount of dried carbon that will blow out. You'll typically find the culprit cylinder at this time based on the amount of carbon blowing out. Crank the engine over with the plugs out to remove excess liquid. Install the plugs and drive the vehicle around the block. Repeat all of these steps again. This cleans the piston crown and rings from the top side. When starting the engine after the second soak, dump in a can of BG EPR or LiquiMoly engine flush and let it idle for 30 minutes. this cleans the rings from the bottom side. Change the oil and filter and call it a day! This cured an engine burning 1qt every 200 miles @160k miles. It now burns nothing between 5k mi oil changes. You will have to repeat this every so often (2-3 oil changes) as the rings will re-clog. Yes its a pain, but it beats the cost of a new engine.

    • @triblackcorvette
      @triblackcorvette ปีที่แล้ว +29

      I did this on a Honda with chemtool had to do it twice to fix the oil burning

    • @GooberProductionz
      @GooberProductionz ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Is this applicable to the tsi engines as well?

    • @snoofayy6150
      @snoofayy6150 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      We do something similar! But instead we use that GDI intake cleaner sauce, AC Delco makes a good one and even MOPAR has an aggressive cleaner too

    • @GooberProductionz
      @GooberProductionz ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@snoofayy6150 you put it through the intake or dump it in the spark plug hole?

    • @snoofayy6150
      @snoofayy6150 ปีที่แล้ว +22

      @@GooberProductionz spark plug holes! Leave it in there for several hours and fill the up again, it breaks down and weakens a lot of the hard carbon and shit that's sticking up the piston rings,
      Afterward you should suck it out with a little vacuum pump, and absolutely drain the oil, then fill with cheap oil, let it idle and warm up and go for a HARD drive, you'll see all kinds of evil smoke coming out of the exhaust and probably pop a CEL and piss off the o2 sensors a little bit
      Once it's good and hot and there's no more James bond smoke billowing out behind you, then drain the oil again and fill with the good stuff you normally use, don't want to drive for too long with all that crud and chemical in there!

  • @JamiesGarage1
    @JamiesGarage1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +216

    Lots and lots of time spent making this video. Great job! 🤘

    • @Deutscheautoparts
      @Deutscheautoparts  2 ปีที่แล้ว +22

      Too much 😆

    • @Errol.C-nz
      @Errol.C-nz ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@Deutscheautoparts just discovered your channel.. watched your episode on efforts to clean intake ports on direct injection systems.. I've had the same issues with EGR diesel engines much much worse though.. it may sound radical.. but I've two now & works a treat & very easy & if diligent it safe for the engine.. I semi fill the ports.. with closed valves.. tergo commercial paint stripper.. sounds more radical than it is.. leave it 15-30mins & water last ports clean.. initially with blaster off to flush out the stripper without it blowing onto everything.. then blaster on & ports clean like new.. airgun residual water out & wd40 ports & cylinders valves open.. air out the engine with injectors (diesel) or plugs out on the starter & reassemble.. it's a lot easier & quicker than it sounds.. cheers from New Zealand

    • @writenamehere0000
      @writenamehere0000 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      So? Wanna do nothing and make money? Snobs.

    • @Ismael-995
      @Ismael-995 ปีที่แล้ว +2

  • @KobraPun
    @KobraPun 2 ปีที่แล้ว +69

    Great video, glad I could help with supplying the engine! Great knowledge to be learned here, thanks Paul and everyone at DAP.

  • @synctwisted
    @synctwisted ปีที่แล้ว +24

    The editing and subtle humor in this video is classic. Quality content all around

  • @martinwarner1178
    @martinwarner1178 ปีที่แล้ว +86

    In 1970 to 1974 I trained to be an engineer (UK) Our training officer, always used flushing oil during the oil changes. It went like this; Drop the old oil, fill with flushing oil, which was thinner than normal oil, run for a set period, drop the flushing oil, change filters and then fill with the correct oil spec. He was highly regarded, and he ran old cars...forever! I took up this practice, for a while, but, it got harder to find the same flushing oil. All you could get was a small can to add to the old oil, before you changed the oil. That didn't seem so effective. Peace be unto you.

    • @J_S209
      @J_S209 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Look up local bulk oil dealers, they will usually sell 20 litre drums drums of oil based, not solvent based, engine flush. The drums work out to be a fraction of the price of similar products at retail parts shops. I’ve used a flush nearly every oil change on brand new cars but I’d be cautious using a flush for the first time in an older or high kilometre engine.

    • @sacrefice_8753
      @sacrefice_8753 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@J_S209 Hey, thanks for the warning about the older engines. I was thinking about flushing my 23 years old Golf, because of the oil eating and the previous owners probably never did it but it got me curious what could go wrong if you flush an older engine ? Serious question btw.

    • @7privet_294
      @7privet_294 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      @@sacrefice_8753 The concern always is that the flush will get some of the gunk off and it could clog the piston rings, oil passages and oil pickup

    • @talltom1129
      @talltom1129 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      I learned this about 40 years ago from the guys who trained me to be a forklift mechanic. I was told to use dexron trans fluid, and a new filter. This is after warning the engine and letting the old oil drain overnight. Let the engine idle for 30 minutes, with the dexron and the new filter. Let the engine drain overnight again, and fill it with new oil with a fresh filter. The detergents in dexron are super effective at scrubbing carbon from your engine. Cheap and very effective way to keep an older engine running well. I've owned easily 100 cars and trucks in those 40 years, all used. Did this every time I bought a new to me vehicle, and I've never blown a motor.

    • @richardreese5377
      @richardreese5377 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I have always flushed crankcase with a couple quarts of gasoline once the old oil is drained . 348,000 miles and not using any oil between changes

  • @rkan2
    @rkan2 2 ปีที่แล้ว +176

    The 30psi increase is certainly an improvement... 5psi is surely within the error margin just after an oil change lol.

    • @itsthemetho
      @itsthemetho ปีที่แล้ว +13

      I guess removing engine deposits is a pretty random outcome also. Sometimes the deposits might help nurse a worn part seal better and othertimes prevent a good seal.

    • @johnrroberts7900
      @johnrroberts7900 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@itsthemetho Agree 100%, especially for leaks, lol. Strong believer in - if it ain't broke, don't fix it. I do 3,000-mile oil changes, which for me is the best preventative. If it were oil-burning 1 liter per 172 miles (!), you're up for big bucks anyway, so you've got nothing to lose trying these.

    • @randr10
      @randr10 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@johnrroberts7900 Yeah a liter/quart every 172 miles is once every 2-3 days if you have a normal commute. You'd be spending almost as much on oil as fuel.

  • @lastmanstanding9389
    @lastmanstanding9389 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    I once purchased an old Range Rover V8 which was very sluggish, so I threw a bottle of Wynns's Engine Flush into the oil and drove the vehicle home (1000km journey). After 200km the engine suddenly loosened up and pulled like a work horse. Was very impressed with the Wynn's flush. I use the cheapest oil I can find and when doing an oil change, I add a bottle of Wynn's Charge to the oil and have never had a problem. I change the oil annually or 10 000km which ever comes first. I drive a 1996 Opel Kadette.

    • @orlandodizo5097
      @orlandodizo5097 17 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Wow...very interesting. Might try it too.

  • @awaara24
    @awaara24 ปีที่แล้ว +51

    wow, this video escalated quickly from an oil change to complete teardown and explanation. Loved every bit of it!

  • @MarcelloTheBandit
    @MarcelloTheBandit 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I haven't used the BG kit, but I have used the Liqui-Moly ProLine Engine Flush many times. First time was on a 2006 Volvo S60 T5 with 80k miles on it. The previous owner took it to the dealer for conventional oil changes every 7500 miles. It was burning about a liter of oil every 1100 miles and after we used the engine flush, the filter was about half full of sludge flakes. It ended up using only about half a liter of oil over 5k miles after that. If I kept my foot in it, it would be a liter every 2500 miles. Second time was a 2004 Chevy Trailblazer with 260k miles on it. It hadn't had an oil change for 35k miles and had a tractor-like idle. We ended up changing the oil and filter before we did the flush and because I was busy at work, it ended up running for 45 minutes instead of 20 minutes. When we drained that oil, it was actually a dark grey instead of a black. We filled that one up with Royal Purple 5w30 and a wix XP oil filter. One funny thing was at the idle was still rough, just less so, but when you gave it throttle, the engine got so smooth you couldn't feel it running. The same thing happened with the Volvo, but it felt more like a sewing machine's soft vibration. Those are just the two notable stories for now. I might have another with a 2006 Nissan Maxima with 300k miles coming up. That one uses 2 quarts within 3500 miles.

  • @mocasinuldomnuluipablo2237
    @mocasinuldomnuluipablo2237 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Thank you for every video posted! I love your content, so much passion and knowledge

  • @NICOLAI_VET
    @NICOLAI_VET ปีที่แล้ว +78

    Before engine flush was a thing we used to mix diesel into a new batch of oil. Let the engine idle for an hour. Then we leveled the pistons and filled the cylinder with the some of the oil/diesel mix and left it the night over. Emptied the cylinders, changed oil, filter and plugs. Worked really well.

    • @duckmyass
      @duckmyass ปีที่แล้ว +5

      We used kerosene and oil and only ran it for about 5 minutes, then drained it.

    • @joeboxer3365
      @joeboxer3365 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@duckmyass First car was a 69 ford fairlane wagon 302, that I wanted to clean out, used Gunk engine flush, smell like ksene and ran 5 min and was worried what I'd done cause of some noise, I've now heard of using a quart or 2 of atf, which to me sounds more engine friendly even possibly to run it a tank or two of gas especially for older engines

    • @duckmyass
      @duckmyass ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@joeboxer3365 The trick is that when you run it you don't drive it or rev it up you just let it idle so that it is getting the kerosene run all through the engine. Kerosene won't provide great lubrication like motor oil but it still provides enough that your engine won't get damaged from it as long as it isn't pushed hard in those 5 minutes. After the 5 minute run you can let it set for a while if you it is a really gunked up engine just to let it dissolve a bit more of the crude. I have even know of some guys that would pull the spark plug out after running it, then fill them with kerosene and then hand turn the engine a few rotations and let it just sit for an hour to free up the piston rings.
      Now after you go nuts with the kerosene I would personally change the oil drive it 30 minutes and then change it one more time because the kerosene is never going to get completely drained the first time you do it and it will hurt the characteristics of your motor oil... but by the second oil change enough of it will be out and the small amount still in isn't going to cause you any issues.

    • @cipriansofineti346
      @cipriansofineti346 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      And good bye to the lambda sensor and the catalytic converter. Your method may work on ancient engines.

    • @iriantoivan
      @iriantoivan ปีที่แล้ว +2

      somehow mineral diesel oil is better for rinse and better performance. i mix the mineral diesel oil with palm oil as an aditif for my engine. for the 1st 500km with daily driving, all the slug ways up. then change it with the new mix, tap again at 1500km. voila, my engine run smooth and only gold varnish left. i learned before with my motorcycle single piston.

  • @dru6353
    @dru6353 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Enjoyed the video guys. That was some impressive improvement on cylinder 4. Glad to hear my 08 Grand Prix burning a quart every 4,000 miles is probably still in spec. 😄
    Have liked and subscribed!

  • @neilwalker8686
    @neilwalker8686 2 ปีที่แล้ว +49

    The oil control rings are different as well. The revised ones are the wave type, opposed to the notched type.

    • @leneanderthalien
      @leneanderthalien ปีที่แล้ว +6

      the new pistons are different from the old, with a MUCH larger U-Flex oil scrapping ring and MUCH bigger oil return holes

    • @harrywalker968
      @harrywalker968 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      wave type used in racing for decades

    • @billfoster6809
      @billfoster6809 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      OIL CONTROL RINGS !!! How did he not mention that VW/Audi changed to a waffle style from the spring and pin-hole style. Oil Control is the subject of the video and its the name of these rings... But ignore that.

  • @tommygogh4243
    @tommygogh4243 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I normally do not tend to like videos. But as you guys spend so much effort in this video, I definitely made sure to hit the like button

  • @akesha4138
    @akesha4138 ปีที่แล้ว +128

    To let you know, using engine flush, follow directions and get the gunk out of engines, including piston rings. This then allows the oil rings to expand to make a better seal with the cylinder walls, reducing oil burning. All engines with over 60 K miles can benefit from this procedure.

    • @brownrussell1073
      @brownrussell1073 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Never heard of it like that. Is that documented?

    • @billwilson3665
      @billwilson3665 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@brownrussell1073 No

    • @angus9558
      @angus9558 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      engine flush also gunks up oil coolers....

    • @dbzownz12345
      @dbzownz12345 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Scotty also said an engine flush could remove some old build up that's helping to prevent more oil from being eaten up. I guess it's at your own risk. If you're refilling every 3-500 miles then I'd do it. If you're doing pretty good at every 900-1k then I'd leave well enough alone. SuperTech oil isn't that expensive only cost me $21 for 5qts @ Walmart.

    • @anthonytan2074
      @anthonytan2074 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Is using engine flushes a temporary or permanent fix?

  • @GreyMK7Jet
    @GreyMK7Jet 2 ปีที่แล้ว +74

    At Honda we have 3 successful BG dynamic services and those were the only ones sold the past year so 3/3 isn’t bad so far lol I know it’s a whole different brand/engine (09-15 V6 with VCM) but wanted to mention in case people got the wrong idea of BG, they’re great products and work extremely well! Hence the slight improvement from the Passat you did. Based on potential shitty maintenance. That carbon is a bitch to break down based on my fair share of engine tear downs. Either way I love using Liqui Moly stuff they recommend the flush every 30k and it helps out a lot as well!

    • @matthewfreidus5034
      @matthewfreidus5034 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Did these engines stop burning oil ? I have a v6 Honda and am trying to see if there’s anything I can do to slow the burning. Burns about a quart every 2,500miles.

    • @philjerome9795
      @philjerome9795 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@matthewfreidus5034 I currently drive a 2007 Pilot with 226,000 miles that uses almost no oil. I previously had a much newer Ridgeline that burned about a quart every 3,000 miles. I think a lot has to do with the thinner oil used in newer engines (0W-20) and the low-tension piston rings.

    • @nicohendricks2240
      @nicohendricks2240 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      put 7 spoons of bearing greace in engine with old oil idol for 30 minutes drain oil put new oil filter and fresh oil engine goes forever maximum performance

    • @buttsexandbananapeels
      @buttsexandbananapeels 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I use the proline flush every 5th oil change, even on new engines. The best way to fix a problem is to avoid one to begin with.

  • @whitefreeman5798
    @whitefreeman5798 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    way back in my day we did this process but instead of using expensive treatments we used a quart or so of diesel and kerosene added to the old oil ran it for a while then changed the oil and added another quart of d/k ran it and drove it for a while then changed the oil again.. it worked pretty good at removing sludge and build up

    • @lastmanstanding9389
      @lastmanstanding9389 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I use 3 litres of diesel with 1 litre of oil, idle engine for 10 minutes then drain.

  • @benztech2262
    @benztech2262 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    One thing we all can gather from this video is check your oil more often. If your car doesn’t have an oil level sensor, you can easily damage your engine by running your engine too low on oil!
    Also I run “Marvel’s Mystery Oil” in my personal vehicles and I don’t have any oil consumption issues.

    • @wisemanbell6957
      @wisemanbell6957 ปีที่แล้ว

      u mean add it to the engine oil or to the fuel?

    • @740GLE
      @740GLE ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I used to run MMO in the oil on my old Volvo, really helped those hydraulic lifters. It can be used as an oil additive.

  • @loluspololus
    @loluspololus 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    One thing for sure ,BG products Rocks !!!!
    Great video thank you

  • @ItsAlive111
    @ItsAlive111 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    A ton of Honda Accords and Toyota Camries from the 2008 to 2012 era are burning oil. This is quite a good video for such owners too

  • @flipfinish
    @flipfinish ปีที่แล้ว +53

    I use the liquimoly engine flush which I buy from Napa in my 2003 BMW 330ci. The M54b30 is notorious for burning oil. On 2 separate cars with the same engine I went from burning a qt every 400-500 miles to a qt every 1200 or so. I then use it before every other oil change along with 5w40 liqui moly leichluft oil and it just keeps getting better. Both cars are an excess of 230k miles.

    • @saiffyzy
      @saiffyzy หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thank you this gives me hope on my 330xi 263k miles. Burning a quart every 450 miles.

  • @isaiahabrahambonilla
    @isaiahabrahambonilla 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    My car burned oil bad like 2 months ago but I pulled my head of and put new valve guide seals in among other things and it hasn't lost any since 👍 I got a 130000 mile 2.slow

    • @snoofayy6150
      @snoofayy6150 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Those 2.slows are rock solid!

  • @michaelwalker8766
    @michaelwalker8766 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I like the way you impart knowledge with humour. Thanks Paul.

  • @kiranb2482
    @kiranb2482 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thanks, very good video…
    On the lighter side my 2-stroke bike used to consume around 1 liter of oil every 700 kms, was a good one 2 decades ago!

  • @roddyhaley3005
    @roddyhaley3005 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Love these kinds of videos from you guys
    Much appreciated!!

  • @thecarguide4303
    @thecarguide4303 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Great video man! EPR is BGs version of LMs engine flush, same purpose and price range. We sell BG Dynamic for the badly sludged ones, EPR for consumption and pm with BG MOA, with amazing results.
    If you want a GREAT top engine soak product (for the upper rings) BG also has some options. 1- #201 for an injection system flush that digs deep. 2- #210 fuel system cleaner (older chemistry) but work amazing for a too engine soak.
    Feel free to reach out if you guys need more info. Great job guys!

  • @eugeneleroux1842
    @eugeneleroux1842 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you for such an informative and valuable presentation.

  • @bash5552
    @bash5552 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    great vid! Thanks for all the work on this one!

  • @CreeperOnYourHouse
    @CreeperOnYourHouse ปีที่แล้ว +28

    the "low tension" piston ring is a misunderstanding; the pressure put on the cylinder walls is the same (and so just as effectively prevents blowby), but because the rings are thinner, there's less surface area on which the pressure can apply force, thus applying less force and by extension less friction. The issues come when, like you say, the oil control rings get prematurely clogged or are poorly designed and it stops working.

    • @charleswesley9907
      @charleswesley9907 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Piston ring " LANDS " wears out letting blowby between the expanded ring and the piston itself . The only way to stop blowby in a worn engine is to bore the engine , new pistons and rings installed correctly. Then the crank and rods, cam and lifters all need to be remachined . In other words take it to the machine shop. Then break it in right , That engine rebuild in a can will insure your trip to the car dealer or machine shop with even more damage.

    • @heinpereboom5521
      @heinpereboom5521 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      A piston ring must have a minimum preload, because otherwise the combustion gas can also find a way between the spring and the cylinder wall, while it has to come just behind the spring and press it against the cylinder wall.
      The gas pressure can more easily get between the spring and cylinder wall than between the piston and the inside of the spring, so if this preload is not sufficient, the gas goes between the spring and cylinder wall.
      The oil is then blown off and hot, so more blow-by and oil consumption + poor lubrication.
      The minimum preload (surface pressure) of the spring is essential, but does not ensure the seal, only the gas pressure does.
      The width of the spring is not essential for oil consumption.
      The oil scraper ring also does not work properly if it has too little preload.
      The gas pressure pushes the piston rings towards the cylinder wall, if they are narrower or wider, then the surface pressure of the piston rings on the cylinder wall is still the same due to this gas pressure.
      That is no reason for more oil consumption.
      If this pressure (surface pressure) of the springs themselves is sufficient, piston rings will work fine.
      That minimum pressure MUST be there, otherwise everything will go wrong.
      Oil drainage through the piston wall must of course be good, because then an extra mistake has been made.

    • @charleswesley9907
      @charleswesley9907 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@heinpereboom5521 Ring and piston lands is very important . Otherwise the combustion gasses will pass between the piston and ring . I do believe that GM has looser tolerances than Ford. Ford maintains tight tolerances on their rods and mains and piston to wall clearances and land clearances . Chevys allowable was .004 max on their cranks off the showroom floor and as per the 5.3 v8 loose cylinder clearances . The Chevy runs faster off the showroom and gets to the junk yard faster. I think now most build close tolerance and have a more aggressive quality control . Now with Synthetic Oil clearances must be closer .

  • @DrewFixIt
    @DrewFixIt ปีที่แล้ว +15

    I find 1L of oil per 1200 miles completely unacceptable. My 2011 Audi A3 has “consumed” about this quantity of oil since it was new and Audi would not do anything about it. I think the manufacturers should be held accountable! Cheers Drew

    • @rotax636nut5
      @rotax636nut5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      My old VW Lupo 1.4TDI used so little oil between 10K mile service intervals that no top ups were required at all and this was when the car had over 240K miles on the clock, the engine always ran like a precision Swiss watch and was surprisingly powerful for a 3 cylinder diesel with a 100mph cruising speed available if required, that car always got Shell Rotella 30W summer, 20W winter at 10K mile intervals with an occasional oil filter, I don't recall ever changing the air filter! 80 miles per UK gallon was possible if cruised at 60 mph on the motorway and the average fuel consumption was around 65 miles per UK gallon mainly urban cycle. That was a bloody good car

    • @Grimwriggler
      @Grimwriggler ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@rotax636nut5 yes my 98 Seat cordoba 1.9TDI is running just fine with no oil burning and on the motorway gets 80 mpg. iI did a round trip of 1500kl in May and drove at 55mph got almost 90 mpg. these engines are up there with the old mercedes diesels

  • @manhso5549
    @manhso5549 ปีที่แล้ว

    thankyou for explaining oil burning issue as much as you can on this video.

  • @chrisg6091
    @chrisg6091 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Very much enjoy the empirical approach & clear presentation 👍

  • @REALBanannaman
    @REALBanannaman 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Looks good guys. If you get the carbon/ burnt oil off the rings it might seal better

  • @rabbitenjoyer6320
    @rabbitenjoyer6320 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Great video entertaining & informative 👌🏻

  • @daveunbranded
    @daveunbranded ปีที่แล้ว

    I made it to this channel because of what I watch daily. This was great. I followed and shared

  • @DonJuanzito
    @DonJuanzito ปีที่แล้ว

    You sound so comfortable with this, i admire your video

  • @DonziGT230
    @DonziGT230 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Way back I got a VW powered Sandrail that was burning a crazy amount of oil. I suspected that the rings were carboned up and stuck because the distributor timing advance wasn't working. I decided to give it a Hail Mary and used Seafoam down the carb flooding the engine out several times. After running a whole can through it over the course of a few hours letting it soak between floodings it stopped burning oil and it ran great.

  • @mattkrazit6414
    @mattkrazit6414 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    My oil burner ('13 JSW TDI) doesn't apply here but I appreciate the time a relevance presented in this video. Very informative!

  • @-theBBreal-
    @-theBBreal- ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Awesome video Paul! Definitely going to give this a shot on my daughters car.

  • @cbocbo4529
    @cbocbo4529 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This help me alot that 1.8 was a bad make thanks alot I've learned how to keep it running smooth I been keeping the piston clean up top to keep a good spark now I knw wat to do thanks alot 👌🏿

  • @billk9628
    @billk9628 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Before you do an oil change, 4 ounces of sea foam! Run the car for about 50 miles, then change the oil! Sea foam will flush the carbon from the piston rings, as well as all the oil galleys. After a few changes this will clean out the engine and allow the rings to seat again. 9 bucks, what ya got to lose?

  • @quintonulm2435
    @quintonulm2435 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I personally have used BG’s EPR can (Engine Performance Restoration) on older Subaru engines that burn a fair amount and it dramatically decreased the oil consumption. On my daily driver Legacy with over 300k miles it changed from burning a quart every thousand to less than a quart between oil changes (4-5k). They make great stuff. I suspect this Passat will continue to burn less and less as that can of additive runs it’s course

  • @TerryClarkAccordioncrazy
    @TerryClarkAccordioncrazy หลายเดือนก่อน

    You did a great job on this, a proper investigation following the scientific method. The improvement in compression on that bad cylinder was really significant. The other small 5psi variations in compression could be just random variations like whether the gaps on the piston rings happen to rotate around to line up with each other. The reduction in oil consumption is also a significant result. Some really worthwhile conclusions made here.

  • @disapamok_
    @disapamok_ 21 วันที่ผ่านมา

    My car is burning oil and I was thinking to replace my engine with a used one but after this video I decided not to go for that, instead I get repaired it with updated pistons and piston rings probably. Thanks for the great video. Subscribed and I am happy that I did it.

  • @chess0990
    @chess0990 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Cylinder 2 and 3 are interesting, i had a similar thing happen with a 98 grand cherokee with 300000 miles. I actually had above spec compression on cyl6 which i believe is carbon buildup on crown and combustion chamber

  • @KenPaisley
    @KenPaisley ปีที่แล้ว +5

    The last CPRA engine I ringed the oil rings were completely stuck in the groove. I used Chem dip and a broken ring to get the carbon out of the grooves. It was like concrete.

  • @Jaydizzle870
    @Jaydizzle870 22 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Great tip (worked for me!): I saw a "youtuber" recommend using Berryman's B-12 Chemtool to "free" the faulty piston ring. So, I said to myself, "what can you lose?!" I bought 3 bottles of the stuff & poured it in a nearly-empty gas tank...Voila!!! No more oil-burning for my 2012, 2.4L KIA Sorento engine!!! Oh, I forgot to mention that I filled the tank with Shell premium gas, after pouring the Berryman's!!!

  • @karstgeo7290
    @karstgeo7290 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Great video as always. ❤️ the science.

  • @lawrenceralph7481
    @lawrenceralph7481 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Really interesting. Thanks. You and a few others have convinced me to cut my oil change intervals in half.

  • @gristlevonraben
    @gristlevonraben ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Very cool. I once flushed a 72 LeMans, and had clear oil with every oil change since. I changed it four to three times a year and used it to deliver pizza. I never could figure out why newer cars always turned the oil black no matter how often I changed the oil. 😕 Cool video! 😃

    • @MJorgy5
      @MJorgy5 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      EGR

    • @snoofayy6150
      @snoofayy6150 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      EGR, and Direct injection engines tend to run hot in the combustion chamber and really warm up the ring area

  • @gsxellence
    @gsxellence ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Great job. Everyone deserves a free upgrade.

  • @brucepeters5100
    @brucepeters5100 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Good video. It was very informative.

  • @DirtE30
    @DirtE30 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    You guys make great content!

  • @scotttom2077
    @scotttom2077 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Great video. The key to these engines is good oil every 5000 miles! My 2014 Passat burns about 1/2 liter every 5000. Usually, the oil level is good till about 4000, then I just it off with the extra that is leftover in the bottle and all is good. Using Liqui Moly is key for VW's.

    • @leneanderthalien
      @leneanderthalien ปีที่แล้ว +4

      the problem is with the TSI/TFSI engines (caused from a misconcept from the piston oil scrapping rings, solved only in 2018) ,and if the problem appears did rise the oil consumption at +1 liter per 1000km! the key for VW (and all modern engines) is to make oil changes all 10 000km or 1x year ...

    • @joeboxer3365
      @joeboxer3365 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      In younger days I became owner of a 70 datsun station with with see through rockers and a quart a week oil burning habit, first getting gently used oil from a friend, to finally adding some gear lube 90wt as a replacement, it cut use by half and it was better than running it low, just had to change the mixture adjust leaner so it wasn't fouling plugs, that car was a fun summer beater for early 80s

  • @astroArtTV
    @astroArtTV 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thank you so much, for answering questions I have had about oil burning in my 2012 Countryman! Dealers all say thats normal, in all European cars. I have been applying Moly products which have helped somewhat. Mini was so smart not to includes oil pressure light in this model. Really smart on their part. /sarc/

  • @rickroberge3034
    @rickroberge3034 หลายเดือนก่อน

    BG Dynamic Engine Restoration Service kit majorly improved my Camry consumption. I was burning one quart weekly (500 mile) After this treatment I have only burned 1/3 quart in the last 1000 miles. So grateful for this video. Thanks for attaching amazon link! $350.00 with taxes is a lot of money but should save my converter with the excessive oil consumption. So in my case it was a success!
    Rick

  • @dipling.pitzler7650
    @dipling.pitzler7650 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    The suspicious high carbon build up on the valves may be caused by extreme low rev and short distance driving!

  • @rokguitarstar
    @rokguitarstar ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Back in the day you would run one quart of ATF in place of one quart of oil during an oil change. Drive the car for a hundred miles or so and than do a complete oil change. This trick works well for a sticky lifter.

  • @jesus2400
    @jesus2400 ปีที่แล้ว

    There are a huge number of videos with regard to engine oil usage on Utube. This one is a good one.

  • @MiltonILW
    @MiltonILW ปีที่แล้ว

    I have a 2018 Passat 2.0TSi with this exact problem and of course VW has hid behind their obscene high oil consumption tolerance spec. I had it in for oil consumption test before warranty and VW just said it was within spec, and problem has only gotten worse.
    I'm going through 1L/1300km on average right now. Just had turbo replaced due to slow boost code, and cat was plugged putting car into limp mode.
    Definitely going to try this.1
    Thaaaaank youuuuu!!

  • @MikekiM04
    @MikekiM04 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Have seen on two occasions those older pistons cracked where that missing notch is under the oil control ring. While I’m not sure why the piston was updated strength in that area is a concern.

  • @dominikkozela9763
    @dominikkozela9763 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    If the BG product did that to the filter surely it will damage seals and gaskets

    • @harrylister804
      @harrylister804 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Nah, it just softens them a little. They harden again with the fresh oil.............we hope.

  • @neiloconnor9349
    @neiloconnor9349 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Love the severely dented 44K can at 4:16. Good video.

  • @myname604
    @myname604 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Nice reflection in the rear window at 26:20. Its just an illusion but cool that it looks as it does especially on a VW.

  • @nathanwest2304
    @nathanwest2304 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I have a 1.9TDI with 287.000km, oil level didn't change since the service 10.000km ago
    goes to show that regular service with cheap oil (at less than half the price of castrol) is better than skipping service with good oil

  • @petar443
    @petar443 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    21:24 Large second compresion ring gap is to try and prevent "ring flutter".

    • @richardburns9772
      @richardburns9772 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      I have ring flutter every morning after my cup of coffee

    • @rotax636nut5
      @rotax636nut5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@richardburns9772 me too only I'd describe mine as more like a ring splutter..

  • @poleposition3065
    @poleposition3065 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Tremendous content. Thank you

  • @nelson1667
    @nelson1667 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    My vehicle has been burning a lot of oil lately x thank you so much for doing this video. I’ll be calling my dealer tomorrow to see how much the engine cleaning service costs.

    • @heinpereboom5521
      @heinpereboom5521 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      You can do that, but it won't solve the problem.
      The only reason for oil consumption is the bad construction of pistons and especially too weak piston rings.
      THAT must be fixed first, other things are definitely not the main cause, they are said to mask the real problem by garages.
      I have often seen it with car engines and certainly also with motorcycles, think of BMW.
      All kinds of stories about oil and running in were nonsense, only the construction was not good, but they did not want to admit it, all at the expense of the customers, just like Audi, Volkswagen and BMW.
      Apparently modern engineers can't make good engines after 150 years because they don't understand how it really should work, I'm 100% sure of that.

    • @bucknut2000
      @bucknut2000 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      So how did it work. I tried it and my car went from about 1 quart every 900 miles to 1 quart every 2K miles. GTI at 230K miles

  • @yamman93
    @yamman93 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I have an 2006 e46 330ci with the M54 engine. I currently have 165k miles on the car and the valve stem seals have started to leak. I get blue smoke when I give the car gas after it idles for about 15-20 minutes. I recently tried Liquimoly oil saver and it has completely solved the issue. I used 1 full can and half of another and so far it’s been close to 2k miles and I can not get it to smoke. These really are great products

    • @zechariahkress3741
      @zechariahkress3741 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Hurry up and sell it!

    • @yamman93
      @yamman93 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@zechariahkress3741 why do you say that?

    • @davelowets
      @davelowets ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Then you dont have valve seal issues.... NO motor flush is going to fix wasted valve seals

  • @cuauhtemocccd
    @cuauhtemocccd 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The liqui moly flush actually worked wonders for me, except that i also ran it for 45 mins at 3,000 rpms, drained and refilled, my engine used to burn around 2 quarts between oil changes and the throttle body had a light coat of oil, PCV was new, surprisingly spark plugs werent fouled or dark, they were in excellent shape in a year interval
    3 months after the liqui moly, the throttle body is DRY, and burns around 1/2 qt between oil change, engine also revs up to 3500 rpms soooo much quieter, totally recommend to try it out

  • @xavierhamilton7332
    @xavierhamilton7332 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video, no doubt that ring groove design on the updated pistons was to deal with the oil consumption issue. Nice observation

  • @andrewstoffel8031
    @andrewstoffel8031 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    I am sure that someone else may have commented on this already, but the Cylinder 2 in the first compression test according to what we saw on the video only actually went up to 145 to 150. So there wasn't a loss of compression necessarily between the final compression testing on Cylinder 2 and the initial testing on that cylinder.
    Also, I get the feeling that part of the reason for a decrease in vehicles lasting as long can also have to do with the large increase in the use of ethanol being added to gasoline.

  • @biz4twobiz463
    @biz4twobiz463 2 ปีที่แล้ว +21

    vw/audi really should be ashamed of themselves for the so called, "acceptable oil consumption" amounts. That is obviously coming from the bean counters and legal. Not the true engineers that design. Fantastic and knowledgeable video. Merci

    • @biz4twobiz463
      @biz4twobiz463 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@glennverdeyen5685 ... oh yes, absolutely. Agreed.

    • @ht-ef4so
      @ht-ef4so 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      It’s not only VW/Audi that have that “acceptable oil consumption” parameter. I believe he said toyota also has a similar number to VW/Audi.

    • @biz4twobiz463
      @biz4twobiz463 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@ht-ef4so ... oh, yes, agreed. I know that FORD has a similar policy tooo with the 5.0 Coyote engine that has had issues. My comment is really towards ALL of them that engineer garbage, but with a label attached to justify.

    • @raoulrr
      @raoulrr ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Hyundai says 1 quart every 1,000 miles is in spec for their garbage engines
      Hence the class action lawsuit

    • @biz4twobiz463
      @biz4twobiz463 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@raoulrr ... yah, 1 QT per 1000 miles is excessive beyond reason. Shame on them. With those specs, a person really NEVER has to change the oil. Because, they will burn/replace enough during the 5000 -- 7500 when an oil change is due. Crazy!

  • @AIRCon250
    @AIRCon250 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for this video!

  • @thaswhereiwanabe
    @thaswhereiwanabe ปีที่แล้ว

    Awesome video. Very informative

  • @johntdi19
    @johntdi19 2 ปีที่แล้ว +36

    Working on VWs and Audis professionally in my experience I’ve seen aftermarket oil filters make oil consumption much worse especially with the very cheap ones and it’s one of the first things that Audi has you check when performing oil consumption measurements

    • @hexagonosaurus5848
      @hexagonosaurus5848 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      If its burning oil and its not the pcv/ccv just bin it. Piece of shit engines in piece of shit cars. Same as BMW N63.

    • @akdomun
      @akdomun 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      What kind of oil filters should be used? It's odd though, how does an aftermarket filter affect oil consumption?

    • @xoriatmike6857
      @xoriatmike6857 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@akdomun depending on what level a filter may pull material out, it could strip wear additives etc or restrict flow. That would be my educated guess.

    • @heinpereboom5521
      @heinpereboom5521 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      The only reason for oil consumption is the bad construction of pistons and especially too weak piston rings.
      THAT must be fixed first, those after market filters are definitely not the main cause, they are said to mask the real problem by garages.
      I have often seen it with car engines and certainly also with motorcycles, think of BMW.
      All kinds of stories about oil and running in were nonsense, only the construction was not good, but they did not want to admit it, all at the expense of the customers, just like Audi, Volkswagen and BMW.
      Apparently modern engineers can't make good engines after 150 years because they don't understand how it really should work, I'm 100% sure of that.

    • @johntdi19
      @johntdi19 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@akdomun I’d recommend oem the cheaper filters can change oil pressure due to the design

  • @gregdawson1909
    @gregdawson1909 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    You nailed it there, low tension rings may be part of it, but also thinner oil, longer oil drain intervals, and lackadaisical maintenance by users. My guess is its mainly owners blowing off maintenance. My 2011 tdi cjaa with 225000 miles, no additives and only on time changes with good as specified synthetic oil eats about a liter and a half in the standard 10k interval, nothing odd at all.

    • @heinpereboom5521
      @heinpereboom5521 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Weak piston rings is the main cause.
      The long oil change intervals are indeed bad, that is a false economy and also has consequences for the often poorly constructed camshaft drives.
      The thinner oil only gives more consumption if the construction of the piston and springs is not good, otherwise it is not that bad. (if it is synthetic oil)
      Your oil consumption is good after so many miles and will stay that way for a while.
      You are in luck with your car engine.

    • @harrywalker968
      @harrywalker968 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      modern engines burn oil,,fact..i have a clevo, thrashed, change oil every 3 months,ish.. doesnt use a drop..14 yrs..beat that.. synthetic oil is crap..expensive,,crap..

    • @leadnsteel1428
      @leadnsteel1428 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I have a vacum pump I used to suck the oil out. It gets most of it and I can change it easily now. I change my oil regular 5000 miles

    • @christopher6895
      @christopher6895 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Old cars also burned oil like crazy, long before “weak rings” became a thing.
      The physical construction of engines has vastly improved, as have the materials used. Owner maintenance on the other hand, has plummeted.

  • @cyberthg69
    @cyberthg69 ปีที่แล้ว

    I have a 14 Audi TT that was burning 1 quart every 500 miles...I flushed engine with BG109 before oil change but I ran it for 50 mins at 2300 rpm...more time than recommended. It now does not burn any oil.....Amazing Stuff!

  • @tim.iteland.9447
    @tim.iteland.9447 ปีที่แล้ว

    BG products kick ass in the U.K , also Forte products made in South Africa and available in Europe are legendary.

  • @DickGazInYa
    @DickGazInYa ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I had a Nissan back in the day that would burn about a quart every couple of drives. It was a noticeable smoke show when you drove it lol. After changing the valve seals with no change after, I topped the oil off with a quart of ATF and drove it for about 100 miles. After that, I pulled all four plugs and filled each cylinder with ATF and let it sit for the weekend. I extracted as much ATF as I could from the cylinders and reinstalled the plugs. I fired it up and let it get up to temp (thick white smoke the entire time lol) and then proceeded to drive the hell out of it once it had warmed up. Aka, redline shifts, WOT until the smoke went away.
    After that, I drained the oil and filled it with Mobil 1 15w-50 and continued to drive it as normal. Not only did it stop using oil pretty much entirely, it stopped smoking as well. I drove it for years after and it never used oil between the 3k mile change intervals. In my case, the oil rings were clearly stuck / gummed up causing the issue.

    • @snoofayy6150
      @snoofayy6150 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      It's pretty uncanny how most of the oil Burning you see these days is from carbon'd up piston rings!

  • @F.S92
    @F.S92 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    I could have sworn that Audi told us that 0.5L per 1000km was the acceptable oil consumption on the E888 TFSI 2.0 engines. :)
    Thank god mine doesnt have this. Still love watching these real issues and fixes videos than some cray engine swap ones.

    • @ToCostas
      @ToCostas 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I am running EA888 Gen3b with chip tuning for 130k kilomiters. St1 is last 100k
      Changing oil every 10k kilomiters.
      No any issues. This last gen is really good and long lasting 👍

    • @F.S92
      @F.S92 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@ToCostas I agree, they apparently did fix this issue back in 2014. So 2014 and up should be better in terms of oil.

    • @MrTheHillfolk
      @MrTheHillfolk 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@F.S92 yeah the wife's '14 Jetta with the gen3 1.8 is fine.
      I change it around 6-7k cause it gets a fair amount of highway use.
      It'll take maybe a half quart by around 4k or so.
      If I get the chance ,I'll check it and top it off with some MMO a few hundred miles before I'm gonna dump it to help clean a little.

    • @heinpereboom5521
      @heinpereboom5521 ปีที่แล้ว

      At a consumption of 0.5 liters per 1000 km, the engine must be overhauled.
      I used to have a two-stroke motorcycle and it used much less oil, but it was then seen as polluting and oil wasting.
      The real problem is the surface pressure of the piston rings on the cylinder wall.
      This surface pressure is simply known, but for less friction and so-called fuel savings, this surface pressure is lowered, but that is completely incorrect, because the misery that ensues is much worse than those few % fuel savings.
      Furthermore, the piston must also be well constructed.
      When I see the construction of these pistons in this film, I immediately think of the garbage can, they are so badly made, just rubbish.
      Unfortunately, after 150 years of making engines, people have forgotten how to do that, at the expense of customers, who are just guinea pigs, they don't test anything in the factory, otherwise they wouldn't put it on the market, because the brand name will also break.
      Camshaft drives are also a disaster, together with the far too long oil change intervals.

  • @dennisstafford108
    @dennisstafford108 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I went down this road, it was worth a try. May help if due to poor maintenance, but of the engine has been overheated you will never get that ring tension back and will always burn oil.

  • @MrTaxidriver50005
    @MrTaxidriver50005 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I've been using liquid moly engine flush every 3rd oil change on my 2012 prius. Now on 360,000 miles and burning about 300ml every 10,000 miles. Highly recommend and if your going to do this start before it has oil consumption issues.

  • @testy518
    @testy518 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Chemicals can help temporarily, but in the end the piston rings have to be changed. sometimes your car will smoke upon starting it but stop after it runs a little. This is usually caused by oil leaking from beneath the valves this can be fixed by removing the heads and taking them to a machine shop to have the valve guides knurled.

  • @V10PDTDI
    @V10PDTDI 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    hi I can't remember where I saw this information but the Audi engine from 2009 and up that burns oil had the rings too thin compared to the new updated ring and piston combination and the modification you mentioned above the piston pins are probably helping I work on VW and Audi cars but never had the chance to rebuild one for high oil consumption only timing chains replacements but I have a few customers that had the Audi dealer fix the oil consumption with new piston and all of them stoped burning oil and I have seen cars with the factor is specs and intervals and they still had the problem with oil burning.

    • @heinpereboom5521
      @heinpereboom5521 ปีที่แล้ว

      Perhaps you are not aware that the engineers at Audi and VW and other brands no longer know how to construct pistons and piston rings?
      Chains and camshaft drives are also often incorrectly constructed.
      After 150 years, modern engineers no longer know how to make pistons and springs.
      That is a complicated matter, people think too easily about it, they should ask the retired engineers that and do not want to reinvent the wheel.

  • @soarthroughlimits7245
    @soarthroughlimits7245 ปีที่แล้ว

    Man this got to be video of the year.

  • @fakharrana8447
    @fakharrana8447 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Great 👍. Very useful and informative video

  • @gregculverwell
    @gregculverwell 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I have a 96 landcruiser with around 170k miles. 4.5l straight 6
    When towing a heavy trailer and doing a lot of engine braking it was using around 1 liter of oil per 1200 miles. Also if you left it standing for a few days, it would blow some smoke when you started it.
    I thought it may be leaking valve stem seals, so I put in some Liqui molly Motor Oli Saver.
    The old level dropped about 2mm in 500 miles and then stabilised. After 2500 miles the level hasn't dropped any further. Also the oil is much cleaner - still an Aber colour with a tinge of grey.

  • @nathanblanchard2357
    @nathanblanchard2357 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    I have a few comments. I work in the service department at Hyundai and we are having a hard time with oil burning on some of our vehicles, most of these vehicles are customers who never service with us. I've heard the low tension rings reasoning before, and I'm positive that's part of the issue. The most common comment I get from these customers is "I've owned many cars and have never had issues before, and my maintenance habits have not changed" I try to explain the low tension ring reasoning, and they just fluff it off 🤷‍♂️ Honestly, I feel they should just get back to regular rings IMHO.
    Second. Is it me, or did the updated Audi piston have a thicker oil control ring gap?
    Third, would.you be willing to try seafoam engine treatment on another oil consumption car? I'd be interested to see how it works as well.
    Thanks for the video. I'm tempted to make business cards with a link to this video, and give them to customers who are lost when I try to explain this phenomenon.

    • @Rundark-
      @Rundark- ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I think Project Farm did a video with Seafoam, here's a link to a bunch of videos on the subject.
      th-cam.com/users/results?search_query=project+farm+seafoam.
      I own a 1999 Hyundai Accent with the 5sp. manual, and it's holding up quite well with over 180k miles on it. I did a compression check a few thousand miles ago and it was hitting close to 200 psi per cylinder. I found it almost perfectly preserved in a thicket of blackberry bushes where it was forgotten for 12 years. The owner bought it brand new and put 159k miles on it in the five years he drove it. I gave him $300 bucks and replaced the ECM and the fuel pump to get it going and since then I have only had to replace the lower control arms in the front and the struts. It was almost pristine in appearance until I moved to the city where it has suffered the abuse of @$$H0L#$ who hate everything.
      Then I was sideswiped on the freeway while on my way to work. I've always wanted to test my theory on maintaining control of the car after being sideswiped, too many Bond movies and episodes of the A-Team are perhaps to blame for that. Weird thing is, that practice kicked in although I never practiced it, while I maintained my forward direction without getting outside my lane, the girl that struck me went spinning out of control. I got over to the shoulder as fast as I could and immediately ran down to her car . She was outside of it kinda walking away in a daze of confusion.
      I got her settled down and made sure she was OK, she was further confused by this as she felt I should be angry. I laughed and said, " If I thought you had done this maliciously, I would be. Even then, I would still want to make sure you were OK considering what happened after being struck. Besides, they are just cars we can get new ones, we don't get new selves if we are damaged beyond repair."
      Her insurance Co. gave me $3200 and change for my car, not without me pointing out the fact that Blue Book and actual replacement costs are two entirely different things. do yourself a favor if you don't already know this and employ this knowledge should you ever have to deal with a claim. Otherwise you could end up with thousands of dollars less that you are entitled to. I used the money to buy a Honda Accord, but not before buying the Hyundai back. It is still very driveable as it was only affected cosmetically. Just to have around as a spare, I'll eventually get around to doing the body work, it's on loan to a friend in need at the moment though. It's a damn solid car, the second of which I have owned, I'd still have the first one but an ex-roommate/friend sent it to the boneyard fearing I had abandoned it. The title was still in his name unfortunately, and more unfortunately you don't find many if any of these cars in there anymore, hence why I bought a Honda, lol.

    • @SJ-kz4mv
      @SJ-kz4mv ปีที่แล้ว +1

      its because hyundai gdi engine is a garbage. currently own cadenza 2.4 theta 2 engine in it. I feel like carbon is building up crazy in it. The car only has 80000kms on it. now it has funky idealing in cold start and burning over a liter of oil between the oil change

    • @SJ-kz4mv
      @SJ-kz4mv ปีที่แล้ว +1

      additionally hyundai is going back to mpi engines for reasons except their performance line models

    • @thomasgilbreath1250
      @thomasgilbreath1250 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@SJ-kz4mv did you install an oil catch can?

  • @ng-ht1vx
    @ng-ht1vx 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Eurotrash Motorsports has several videos where he fixed major oil burning in several of the Audi 2.0 engines by pouring Berryman's B12 chemtool down the spark plug holes a number of times and letting it soak for a period of time. Might be worth looking at his videos and giving it a try.

  • @bleach_drink_me
    @bleach_drink_me 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I have had good results with reducing oil burning with running engine flush products. I also as a gentle clean like to add a bit of MMO for the last ~50miles.

  • @ironclaw6969
    @ironclaw6969 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The problem is actually worse when you use low-tension piston rings in engines with gasoline direct injection that works in the range of 1000psi or more. Not only do you get oil burning, but you also get gasoline dilution of the oil, some of which is taken care of if you keep the engine hot and it is allowed to evaporate out of the oil and go back into the intake via the pcv system. But, if it is persistent, it's worse than oil burning because it alters the viscosity of the oil and destroys it's lubricating properties which means you're not just burning oil, you've got metal-on-metal contact and premature wear.

  • @nawknivek
    @nawknivek 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Fwiw, I’ve used the LiquiMoly engine flush in my Toyota 2az-fe which consumed about 500ml oil every 3000km… it can now do 5000km without consuming any oil… ymmv

  • @gee3883
    @gee3883 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Brilliant vid gentleman.

  • @jimc6481
    @jimc6481 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    awesome video, you covered evevy .....great job! I dedwill be doing this fluis

  • @NocturneSonate
    @NocturneSonate ปีที่แล้ว +3

    This was a great video to watch. Hopefully all maintenance concerns and issues will be behind me when I buy an electric vehicle this year.

    • @arnog9959
      @arnog9959 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      hahahaha. Just a battery replacement

    • @NocturneSonate
      @NocturneSonate ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@arnog9959 Just like an engine replacement. What's your point?

    • @rccl4487
      @rccl4487 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Going from mechanical issues to electrical issues

    • @NocturneSonate
      @NocturneSonate ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@rccl4487 My brother owns 2 Teslas. He's had them for 5 years without issue and they are on the original brakes. No oil changes or any other maintenance. I'll give that a try.

    • @nazo.8143
      @nazo.8143 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Wait a few more years and see what the battery pack cost to replace.

  • @waifuracer6516
    @waifuracer6516 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I had some oil burning issue on my 1.8T and then on my 2.0pd, and switching from 5w30 to 5w40 completely solved the issue and its still factory spec... My 1.8T 20v was going through the dipstick every 700miles, then after switching to 5w40 I never had to top up between the 5k oil change interval. My passat 2.0pd when I got it I didnt have time to do the oil change on it myself so took it to a friends garage and they put 5w30 in it, after just a week of driving I already had an oil level warning. Change that too to 5w40 I only had to top up once between changes which I do at 8k miles. Oil in question is Mobil 3000 X1.

    • @TheBenLG
      @TheBenLG 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I do the same thing with my 1.8t 20v and mini cooper s N14, both cars use considerably less oil now I put 5w40 in them.

    • @raoulrr
      @raoulrr ปีที่แล้ว +1

      these engines were never designed for 5w30, they made that the spec for fuel economy reasons
      5w40 should be the right oil

    • @pliedtka
      @pliedtka ปีที่แล้ว

      Stinking CAFE killing your engine

  • @colinnicols5387
    @colinnicols5387 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    2001 v6 Accord. I run amsoil signature and change oil once a year. Works out to about 13k miles. Now has 320k and does not burn more than 1/4” down on the dipstick over that year. Good oil works.

  • @KellyScrichfield
    @KellyScrichfield 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I've also heard from a friend that's a marine tech that the Yamalube ring free fuel additive works good.