Hey guys,
How important is changing the oil & filter at the 500km mark on a new bike?
I'll be getting the full first service at around 1000 - 1200 kms most likely, but was wondering about the benefits of dumping the oil and filter early.
Thanks
Blah
Looks like I opened a can of worms with this question seems like there are some very different opinions on the subject. I think I'll take the middle road and do one oil change at 300kms and then take it in for the full service at 1000kms.
I dont wont to get into a debate about when you should change your fluids, there's enough good info out there for you to make that call. With regards to the engine oil change, whenever you do it, I belive it is good practice to check inside the old oil filter and check for any nasties that may be caught in the mesh filter. As an example, small yellow pieces may give you for warning of a cam tensioner starting to break down , etc. Another good idea is to check your sparkplugs when servicing , it gives another reasonable idea how things are going inside. Just my 2c worth !!!
The manufacturer has a better idea then average joe, so i go by his reconmendation. I live in the country approx. 300ks from the dealer, so i get it done when i go into town. Sometimes under most times over the mechanic said aslong as it is close it is all ok. Commonn sense is king.
The way i see it a filter and a few litres of oil is cheap insurance for a $4000 motor, i change my oils in every vehicle i own every 3-4000 klms purely due to the environment i live in. as for running in the engine i used to change it straight after the first lot of heat cycles then 100klms then 500klms then 1000klms always with a quality filter not cheap crap. for the first 2500klms i always used mineral based never full synthetic and has worked for me. just my opinion on what works for me
Thanks rider, I'm planning on doing the oil and filter at around the 300km mark. Are you saying I should change the primary and trans fluids as well at this time?
On my own bikes ( many Harleys over the last 20 years ) 1st oil change 250 K's 2nd oil change 1000 K's 3rd oil change 2000 k's ( by this time 100% wide open throttle "if required " haha...) Then every 4000 K's oil AND filter each time I've run several Harleys to over 70,000 K's and NEVER had lifter troubles / oil consumption problems / blue smoke blowing etc etc I've seen all of these problems and more on mate's and associates bikes over the years Oh , and for what it's worth I've used synthetic oils all those years , often just Mobil 1 " car oil " bought in bulk at " Supercheap 20% off days " I also buy filters by the box of 24 , from ebay delivered to my home address. ( I do service A LOT of other guy's bikes from home ! )
LATE EDIT Yes , I have the same oil change regime on any new car I buy as well. I don't buy that many cars and after the first 2 changes it's every 10,000 K's . Our " current " 2002 Suzuki hatch has 200,000 klicks up now and still has no oil usage and does 43MPG . I'll change it when it eventually dies !!
Lol.... Does your new car have an air cooled 1690 v-twin motor?
No but it does have a lot more moving parts running at tighter tolerances than the v-twin.
Millions of people round the world running cars, trucks, tractors, bikes etc all changing oils at the recommended time without problems but each to their own.
Well I dumped my oil at 200kms and it looked as clean as a whistle. No sign that it had even broken down in the slightest, no visible contaminants in the oil or on the magnetic drain plug.
Next time I don't think I will bother. Just ride it until the first service IMO.
You usually only see swarf on the primary and gearbox drain plugs ( and you DO see it on them !!) In the case of the engine oil , the swarf , if there is any , is well caught by the oil filter Still a good idea to have changed it as soon as you have done IMO
The old oil question.
Every new car and bike I had, I change myself only at the recommended intervals. If I was to sell my bike at 100,000 kms, and you sold yours at 100,000 as well, I would have spent squillions less if your changing oil more often than schedule.. The only way you can tell the the health of the engine oil is by laboratory analysis at oil change intervals. Costs too much for ordinary Joe blow. If someone recomends changing oil in shorter intervals than recomended, ask for the lab analysis. Otherwise its unverified rubbish
Anything else is pure unproven comment based on what someone says who has never had oil analysed every km schedule or even once. Trucks and big engines have there oil analised due to cost of engnes but mainly due to minimise down time. And even then the tests are done to report on oil condition additives ect and recommend oil change schedule or hours. Harleys run in wildly variable engine temps and climates, IE in city stop start traffic or cold climates, No one can tell you what Harlys oil additive specs are, but you could reasonably assume there oil forumla is for wildly varied engine temp use otherwise thered be huge warranty concerns.
You wont see lamborgini, bmw, or any high end car recommending oil changes except at recommended intervals and definately not every few hundred kays at run in times.
Ive yet to see any bike at 100,000 kays thats in any better nick than any other bike at 100,000 kays that is used as a daily ride and maintained by kms schedule compared to changing oil more regularly than schedule. If you change oil more than km schedule, All your doing is making oil companies richer with no proven benifit to you.
If folk suggest changing at lower km schedule, then weres the data to show the so called benifit.
I would only increase oil change intervals if day temps were at 35 plus C and nights below freezing point due to vacume effect of engine ingesting water vapour as the earth cools at night to freezing. Otherwise dont waste your money as Australia has few cimate variable areas that experience that extreme from day to night.
All things being equal, save your cash, interval only and ride.
Of corse im not comparing a bike thats being flogged to one that hasnt at 100,000kays, or one thats had heavily modified engine horsepower gains. I wouldnt worry about a few metal particles on your drain plugs as long as it decreases with oil changes.If it dose increase with each oil change, its telling you something else is wrong and not the oil.
Theres no perfect oil for all temp variables and thats why at the least, engine manufactures advise you to change oil at end of summer and winter if you do few engine hours across the seasons or one of the seasons. If someone has the good oil on oil, I love to read the data, cause Ide love my bikes engine to do half a million kays without a rebuild. Im told, unverified, that taxies do half a mill kays on one engine due to the fact that there engines rarly cool down.