Recall = M1 0w-40

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the blur

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GM just went with 0w-40 in their motors that are spinning bearings. Makes you go hmmmmmm.
Newish Escalades, and other newish motors that are blowing up. Big recall.
 

donjetman

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Makes me sadly LMAO if GM thinks that is gonna keep the L87 from blowing up.
 

GMCChevy

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Marky Dissod

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Makes me sadly LMAO if GM thinks that is gonna keep the L87 from blowing up.
Might delay it from giving up til after the powertrain warranty lapses; that's as far as GM gives a damn.

Remember when it was perfectly reasonable to assume that, if a GM V8 didn't make it to 250,000 miles, it was safe to blame the owner / operator?
 

rdezs

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Last year I had a long discussion with a buddy that works in the local GM service department, when I was going through my wife's Escalade L94, AFM delete, etc. Per his advice, I've been running a 5W-40 full synthetic that's labeled for European cars. I now see he was on the right track...

On our 03 Hummer with the 6.0 iron block, all I run now is the 5W30 Valvoline R&P.

I think a zero weight for cold starts is way too thin unless you live in Prudhoe Bay Alaska in the winter.
 

homesick

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Might delay it from giving up til after the powertrain warranty lapses; that's as far as GM gives a damn.

Remember when it was perfectly reasonable to assume that, if a GM V8 didn't make it to 250,000 miles, it was safe to blame the owner / operator?
I remember it being time for a party and a parade if you could get to 100,000 miles.

joe
 

Marky Dissod

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Might delay it from giving up til after the powertrain warranty lapses; that's as far as GM gives a damn.
Remember when it was perfectly reasonable to assume that, if a GM V8 didn't make it to 250,000 miles, it was safe to blame the owner / operator?
I remember it being time for a party and a parade if you could get to 100,000 miles.
Since the 80s, any NYC cab's engine that did not make it to 200,000 miles was a black mark on that fleet mechanic.
Then again, oil changes every 2500-3000 miles were the norm back then.
 
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