Omega Owners Forum
Chat Area => General Car Chat => Topic started by: Lincs Robert on 17 December 2017, 10:31:19
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My new XC now has almost 3k miles on the clock, and is reporting its first service due in another 15k miles. That’s far too long in my opinion - so I’m going to change the oil early. Question is, at what mileage do I change it? It’s not cheap oil, 0-30 FS Edge stuff, which will cost about £70 for a change. So not the sort of thing I want to do willy nilly - which the availability of cheap TC oil allows. There’s not much interest on the Volvo forums about this, but people do report the 2.4 D 5 pots going to mega miles on standard oil change intervals, i.e 18k. Thoughts?
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Think I’d be looking at no more than 6k :-\ Although whilst under warranty you need to be careful about doing anything other than manufacturers spec ::)
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I'm surprised that there is not an initial service at about 5-6k? :-\
Too be honest though whilst it's under warranty I'd stick to the manufacturers service recommendations and wouldn't worry about it. ;)
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Both goods points, thanks.
My thoughts were an initial oil change at perhaps 6k. That should get rid of anything from the manufacturing process / running in period. I was going to suck the old oil out from the dipstick using my Pela vacuum pump & the put the exact same amount of fresh oil, of the same type, in - without a filter change, or taking the sump plug out. Not ideal I know, but it then won’t leave any tell-tale signs when it does go to a dealers @ 18k.
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I'm surprised that there is not an initial service at about 5-6k? :-\
No mainstream manufacturer suggests that anymore, as it's suicidal to them.
Too be honest though whilst it's under warranty I'd stick to the manufacturers service recommendations and wouldn't worry about it. ;)
If manufacturer spec parts are used, no issues in servicing more frequently.
OP - How many miles do you expect to do in a year, as if its around your target for oil servicing, then just run an annual intermediate style service on it, and leaving the main/major service at Volvo schedules.
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I'm surprised that there is not an initial service at about 5-6k? :-\
No mainstream manufacturer suggests that anymore, as it's suicidal to them.
Too be honest though whilst it's under warranty I'd stick to the manufacturers service recommendations and wouldn't worry about it. ;)
If manufacturer spec parts are used, no issues in servicing more frequently.
OP - How many miles do you expect to do in a year, as if its around your target for oil servicing, then just run an annual intermediate style service on it, and leaving the main/major service at Volvo schedules.
I am probably doing 18k a year.
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Personally while under warranty I would stick with what they recommend , after that do whenever you think necessary.
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If it's petrol, then I wouldn't worry about it - that's what modern fully synthetic oil is meant for.
Diesels are another matter; I wouldn't run it past half the recommended interval without a change.
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Personally while under warranty I would stick with what they recommend , after that do whenever you think necessary.
Issue being problems start after warranty period, if you follow their schedule.
I’d either DIY change via dip stick (or dedicated tube?) or ring a few Volvo mains and indies for a quote. If using manufacture specified oil, no issues with warranty :y
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Personally while under warranty I would stick with what they recommend , after that do whenever you think necessary.
Issue being problems start after warranty period, if you follow their schedule.
I’d either DIY change via dip stick (or dedicated tube?) or ring a few Volvo mains and indies for a quote. If using manufacture specified oil, no issues with warranty :y
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Had several new vehicles over the years all serviced as per schedule never experienced any problems.
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I'd be very wary of doing anything that invalidates the warranty. ::)
I bet when Jimmy gave his car back to BMW they went over it with a fine toothcomb and had they found any evidence that he had been tinkering with the car himself, they would have rejected his warranty claim. ;)
Tunnies suggestion of getting a Volvo dealer to do it insn't a bad idea, or if you DIY then use the exactly the same oil and leave no trace. You'd kick yourself if the car develops a problem and Volvo reject your warranty claim because you've serviced it yourself. ::)
If Volvo say the first service is at 18k then I'd keep my money dry until then. :y
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I'd be very wary of doing anything that invalidates the warranty. ::)
I bet when Jimmy gave his car back to BMW they went over it with a fine toothcomb and had they found any evidence that he had been tinkering with the car himself, they would have rejected his warranty claim. ;)
Tunnies suggestion of getting a Volvo dealer to do it insn't a bad idea, or if you DIY then use the exactly the same oil and leave no trace. You'd kick yourself if the car develops a problem and Volvo reject your warranty claim because you've serviced it yourself. ::)
If Volvo say the first service is at 18k then I'd keep my money dry until then. :y
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Agreed entirely, problems usually occur after neglect follow the recommended schedule & you won't go wrong.
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I'd be very wary of doing anything that invalidates the warranty. ::)
I bet when Jimmy gave his car back to BMW they went over it with a fine toothcomb and had they found any evidence that he had been tinkering with the car himself, they would have rejected his warranty claim. ;)
Tunnies suggestion of getting a Volvo dealer to do it insn't a bad idea, or if you DIY then use the exactly the same oil and leave no trace. You'd kick yourself if the car develops a problem and Volvo reject your warranty claim because you've serviced it yourself. ::)
If Volvo say the first service is at 18k then I'd keep my money dry until then. :y
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Agreed entirely, problems usually occur after neglect follow the recommended schedule & you won't go wrong.
Sorry, disagree. Especially if a diesel.
Omega schedule is oil changes 20k, we know full well what impact that has. I do mine every year or every 5-8k ish.
The schedules are more about fleet maintenance costs, what ever the official schedule is, half it at least.
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I'm surprised that there is not an initial service at about 5-6k? :-\
No mainstream manufacturer suggests that anymore, as it's suicidal to them.
Too be honest though whilst it's under warranty I'd stick to the manufacturers service recommendations and wouldn't worry about it. ;)
If manufacturer spec parts are used, no issues in servicing more frequently.
OP - How many miles do you expect to do in a year, as if its around your target for oil servicing, then just run an annual intermediate style service on it, and leaving the main/major service at Volvo schedules.
^^^Wot e sed, I believe this battle was fought and won by Indies many years ago, that warranty is not invalidated provided that Manufacturers spec/parts are used. I do not believe that they could use the argument that it had been serviced early as a warranty denial excuse. :y
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^^^Wot e sed, I believe this battle was fought and won by Indies many years ago, that warranty is not invalidated provided that Manufacturers spec/parts are used. I do not believe that they could use the argument that it had been serviced early as a warranty denial excuse. :y
I suspect they could and would if they suspected it had been DIY'd whilst in warranty. ;)
It'll cost you a lot more if the car develops a problem and you've invalidated your warranty. :(
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At the end of the day oils are vastly improved compared to years ago , you have a quality car in the Volvo I have a colleague at work who has an older one than yours covers at least 20,000 miles a year & the dealership has serviced it from new, the car has never missed a beat & is in superb condition.
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Oil, like most fluids we put in our cars, starts to break down from the second it goes it.
Up until about 5 years ago there was no oil manufacturer who would guarantee certain properties of their product would still be met after 7000 miles in a fairly high performance, though NA, engine. Given that info, I would not consider sticking to manufacturers schedules, that are not their to prolong the life of the engine, they are there to be the absolute minimum to get the car through its warranty period.
In a turbocharged car, which all diesels are now, and more and more small petrols are, you are destroying the oil faster.
The Independents, as has been stated, won the argument about non dealer servicing years ago. DIY follows the same route, it would be up to the manufacturer to prove that it was an error in the servicing AND that you were not competent. The grey areas might be if a non genuine part that was fitted failed, as the car manufacturer could claim reasonable diagnostic costs.
As said previously, if ultra concerned about the arguments over warranty, take it to a Volvo dealer for an oil change only, though will probably cost £100-150.
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^^^Wot e sed, I believe this battle was fought and won by Indies many years ago, that warranty is not invalidated provided that Manufacturers spec/parts are used. I do not believe that they could use the argument that it had been serviced early as a warranty denial excuse. :y
I suspect they could and would if they suspected it had been DIY'd whilst in warranty. ;)
It'll cost you a lot more if the car develops a problem and you've invalidated your warranty. :(
Sorry, don't agree, I've actually discussed this once many moons ago with a main dealer service manager, who reluctantly agreed that I was correct, and that as long as it is done as per spec. etc. warranty remains valid. I do agree that they may try to wriggle, but when push came to shove they would back down. :y
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Or go back to an old Omega & worry about sweet fa.😁
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The servicing to keep up warranty must be carried out by a VAT registered garage using OE equivalent parts. ;)
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The servicing to keep up warranty must be carried out by a VAT registered garage using OE equivalent parts. ;)
Indeed, but as long as you've done that as a minimum, additional services can be done on any basis as long as you don't make a horse's @rse of it, surely? ;)
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^^^Wot e sed, I believe this battle was fought and won by Indies many years ago, that warranty is not invalidated provided that Manufacturers spec/parts are used. I do not believe that they could use the argument that it had been serviced early as a warranty denial excuse. :y
I suspect they could and would if they suspected it had been DIY'd whilst in warranty. ;)
It'll cost you a lot more if the car develops a problem and you've invalidated your warranty. :(
Yes indeed. With all new car dealer warranties as soon as anyone else, DIY'er or non-dealer garage touch the car in any way, your warranty is invalidated. It is not worth the risk, so just let the dealer do the specified work. As it is a new car, wasn't there a service agreement for 3 years thrown in? The first service was always free in my day, but they were company fleet cars. :y
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^^^Wot e sed, I believe this battle was fought and won by Indies many years ago, that warranty is not invalidated provided that Manufacturers spec/parts are used. I do not believe that they could use the argument that it had been serviced early as a warranty denial excuse. :y
I suspect they could and would if they suspected it had been DIY'd whilst in warranty. ;)
It'll cost you a lot more if the car develops a problem and you've invalidated your warranty. :(
Yes indeed. With all new car dealer warranties as soon as anyone else, DIY'er or non-dealer garage touch the car in any way, your warranty is invalidated. It is not worth the risk, so just let the dealer do the specified work. As it is a new car, wasn't there a service agreement for 3 years thrown in? The first service was always free in my day, but they were company fleet cars. :y
It was pre-registered, so new but not new (10 miles on clock). I enquired about service packages - they are only available to new purchasers or on used cars if you take the dealer finance package - which I didn’t.
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^^^Wot e sed, I believe this battle was fought and won by Indies many years ago, that warranty is not invalidated provided that Manufacturers spec/parts are used. I do not believe that they could use the argument that it had been serviced early as a warranty denial excuse. :y
I suspect they could and would if they suspected it had been DIY'd whilst in warranty. ;)
It'll cost you a lot more if the car develops a problem and you've invalidated your warranty. :(
Yes indeed. With all new car dealer warranties as soon as anyone else, DIY'er or non-dealer garage touch the car in any way, your warranty is invalidated. It is not worth the risk, so just let the dealer do the specified work. As it is a new car, wasn't there a service agreement for 3 years thrown in? The first service was always free in my day, but they were company fleet cars. :y
It was pre-registered, so new but not new (10 miles on clock). I enquired about service packages - they are only available to new purchasers or on used cars if you take the dealer finance package - which I didn’t.
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When I bought my Mazda 626 in 2001 it was pre registered 45 miles on the clock I got the service package at £36 per month, that was from a Mazda dealership, was yours from a car supermarket or main dealer ? No finance involved.
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^^^Wot e sed, I believe this battle was fought and won by Indies many years ago, that warranty is not invalidated provided that Manufacturers spec/parts are used. I do not believe that they could use the argument that it had been serviced early as a warranty denial excuse. :y
I suspect they could and would if they suspected it had been DIY'd whilst in warranty. ;)
It'll cost you a lot more if the car develops a problem and you've invalidated your warranty. :(
Yes indeed. With all new car dealer warranties as soon as anyone else, DIY'er or non-dealer garage touch the car in any way, your warranty is invalidated. It is not worth the risk, so just let the dealer do the specified work. As it is a new car, wasn't there a service agreement for 3 years thrown in? The first service was always free in my day, but they were company fleet cars. :y
It was pre-registered, so new but not new (10 miles on clock). I enquired about service packages - they are only available to new purchasers or on used cars if you take the dealer finance package - which I didn’t.
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When I bought my Mazda 626 in 2001 it was pre registered 45 miles on the clock I got the service package at £36 per month, that was from a Mazda dealership, was yours from a car supermarket or main dealer ? No finance involved.
Main dealer. Yes, service packages are available for a fixed monthly payment as you suggest - but I can’t see the advantage of them. The service deals available to some buyers however, offer say 2 years servicing for £199, which is a good deal - but not available to me unfortunately......
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And the dealer service packages are worth less than, to quote a posh bloke I used to work with, a used condom smeared in dogshit.
In this specific case, it would only get done at the manufacturer silly intervals. And secondly, most main dealers are too incompetent/lazy/tight to be trusted to service cars.
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^^^Wot e sed, I believe this battle was fought and won by Indies many years ago, that warranty is not invalidated provided that Manufacturers spec/parts are used. I do not believe that they could use the argument that it had been serviced early as a warranty denial excuse. :y
I suspect they could and would if they suspected it had been DIY'd whilst in warranty. ;)
It'll cost you a lot more if the car develops a problem and you've invalidated your warranty. :(
Yes indeed. With all new car dealer warranties as soon as anyone else, DIY'er or non-dealer garage touch the car in any way, your warranty is invalidated. It is not worth the risk, so just let the dealer do the specified work. As it is a new car, wasn't there a service agreement for 3 years thrown in? The first service was always free in my day, but they were company fleet cars. :y
No this is incorrect Lizzie. It used to be the case, but the law has changed that you can have your car serviced at a VAT registered garage and as long as they use genuine parts, it dosn't affect your warranty. ;)
Some here seem to think that you can DIY with genuine parts as well and not affect your warranty, but I certainly wouldn't want to test that. ::)
I'll be interested to see what Jimmy has to say on this subject as he has to be our resident expert on warranty issues! :y
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If it's petrol, then I wouldn't worry about it - that's what modern fully synthetic oil is meant for.
Diesels are another matter; I wouldn't run it past half the recommended interval without a change.
I'm with Nick :y
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If all your looking to do, is change the oil and filter for peace of mind, then just go and buy a filter from Volvo, and a quality oil, and change it, you don't have to inform any body,
Regular oil changes never hurt a car, just do it, and stop faffing about :P
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If all your looking to do, is change the oil and filter for peace of mind, then just go and buy a filter from Volvo, and a quality oil, and change it, you don't have to inform any body,
Regular oil changes never hurt a car, just do it, and stop faffing about :P
Being a modern soot chucker, it has to be the right spec to protect the DPF nowadays.
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First job of the spring is change the oil in the Zafira, all the short runs it's doing will kill the oil and sludge up. So aiming for at least yearly changes. Had oil change when I bought it, so will do one in spring time.
If I can figure out how, lack of videos on the tube for Zaf Tourer 2.0 CDTi, might have to use Insignia as reference. :-\
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If all your looking to do, is change the oil and filter for peace of mind, then just go and buy a filter from Volvo, and a quality oil, and change it, you don't have to inform any body,
Regular oil changes never hurt a car, just do it, and stop faffing about :P
Being a modern soot chucker, it has to be the right spec to protect the DPF nowadays.
Indeed, 0W-30 I’m advised.
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First job of the spring is change the oil in the Zafira, all the short runs it's doing will kill the oil and sludge up. So aiming for at least yearly changes. Had oil change when I bought it, so will do one in spring time.
If I can figure out how, lack of videos on the tube for Zaf Tourer 2.0 CDTi, might have to use Insignia as reference. :-\
There will be a little bung on the bottom of the sump and if you undo it all the oil will fall out! :P ::) ;D
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First job of the spring is change the oil in the Zafira, all the short runs it's doing will kill the oil and sludge up. So aiming for at least yearly changes. Had oil change when I bought it, so will do one in spring time.
If I can figure out how, lack of videos on the tube for Zaf Tourer 2.0 CDTi, might have to use Insignia as reference. :-\
There will be a little bung on the bottom of the sump and if you undo it all the oil will fall out! :P ::) ;D
Well there is that ;D ;D ::) ::)
Not been under yet, but wondering about under tray and such. But being GM already looks better to jack and axel stand than the VW.
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If all your looking to do, is change the oil and filter for peace of mind, then just go and buy a filter from Volvo, and a quality oil, and change it, you don't have to inform any body,
Regular oil changes never hurt a car, just do it, and stop faffing about :P
Being a modern soot chucker, it has to be the right spec to protect the DPF nowadays.
Indeed, 0W-30 I’m advised.
LOL, far, far, FAR more than just that. Look the Volvo spec up in the handbook and get investigating. It has to meet a lot of specs, and having a DPF will additionally have to meet one of the many low ash type specs.
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Wonder if GM's standard 10/40 semi is good enough for the bus :-\
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Wonder if GM's standard 10/40 semi is good enough for the bus :-\
Stop thread jacking! :P ::)
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Wonder if GM's standard 10/40 semi is good enough for the bus :-\
Absolutely, categorically not. Nor is the old 5W30 dexos2 fully synth, which I believe isn't suitable for any DPF car.
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Go to local factor, get a 0/30w low saps, full fat.
Most euro 5-6 trucks now use a 5/30 low saps some Iveco use 0/30w low saps.
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^^^Wot e sed, I believe this battle was fought and won by Indies many years ago, that warranty is not invalidated provided that Manufacturers spec/parts are used. I do not believe that they could use the argument that it had been serviced early as a warranty denial excuse. :y
I suspect they could and would if they suspected it had been DIY'd whilst in warranty. ;)
It'll cost you a lot more if the car develops a problem and you've invalidated your warranty. :(
Yes indeed. With all new car dealer warranties as soon as anyone else, DIY'er or non-dealer garage touch the car in any way, your warranty is invalidated. It is not worth the risk, so just let the dealer do the specified work. As it is a new car, wasn't there a service agreement for 3 years thrown in? The first service was always free in my day, but they were company fleet cars. :y
No this is incorrect Lizzie. It used to be the case, but the law has changed that you can have your car serviced at a VAT registered garage and as long as they use genuine parts, it dosn't affect your warranty. ;)
Some here seem to think that you can DIY with genuine parts as well and not affect your warranty, but I certainly wouldn't want to test that. ::)
I'll be interested to see what Jimmy has to say on this subject as he has to be our resident expert on warranty issues! :y
It is always possible I am out of date on this, but I quote a paragraph from the terms and conditions of a BMW warranty:
"If servicing has been carried out by a Non Authorised Workshop, the Authorised BMW Centre and/or BMW Service Authorised Workshop reserve the right to reject any claim where the cause of the defect is due to inadequate servicing or the use of inadequate parts by the Non Authorised Workshop"
Now, does this not support what I stated? It at least means you would be risking a rejection of any claim for, say, a broken engine component if someone not authorised by BMW has worked on your vehicle, giving them an excuse to do so. The words of Dirty Harry come to mind: "well punk, do you feel lucky...." ;D ;D
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^^^Wot e sed, I believe this battle was fought and won by Indies many years ago, that warranty is not invalidated provided that Manufacturers spec/parts are used. I do not believe that they could use the argument that it had been serviced early as a warranty denial excuse. :y
I suspect they could and would if they suspected it had been DIY'd whilst in warranty. ;)
It'll cost you a lot more if the car develops a problem and you've invalidated your warranty. :(
Yes indeed. With all new car dealer warranties as soon as anyone else, DIY'er or non-dealer garage touch the car in any way, your warranty is invalidated. It is not worth the risk, so just let the dealer do the specified work. As it is a new car, wasn't there a service agreement for 3 years thrown in? The first service was always free in my day, but they were company fleet cars. :y
No this is incorrect Lizzie. It used to be the case, but the law has changed that you can have your car serviced at a VAT registered garage and as long as they use genuine parts, it dosn't affect your warranty. ;)
Some here seem to think that you can DIY with genuine parts as well and not affect your warranty, but I certainly wouldn't want to test that. ::)
I'll be interested to see what Jimmy has to say on this subject as he has to be our resident expert on warranty issues! :y
It is always possible I am out of date on this, but I quote a paragraph from the terms and conditions of a BMW warranty:
"If servicing has been carried out by a Non Authorised Workshop, the Authorised BMW Centre and/or BMW Service Authorised Workshop reserve the right to reject any claim where the cause of the defect is due to inadequate servicing or the use of inadequate parts by the Non Authorised Workshop"
Now, does this not support what I stated? It at least means you would be risking a rejection of any claim for, say, a broken engine component if someone not authorised by BMW has worked on your vehicle, giving them an excuse to do so. The words of Dirty Harry come to mind: "well punk, do you feel lucky...." ;D ;D
How old is that BMW warranty though Lizzie? ??? The law change is fairly recent I think? :-\
It's not beyond the realms of possibility that BMW havn't changed the wording on their warranties to deter people from taking their cars to indy garages. ;)
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When I bought my VW from car giant, I had it confirmed in writing from them that DIY service did not impact the warrenty. As long as I used correct oils and followed the service schedule.
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When I bought my VW from car giant, I had it confirmed in writing from them that DIY service did not impact the warrenty. As long as I used correct oils and followed the service schedule.
That wasn't a brand new car though Tunnie and I doubt that you'd get the same from a franchised dealer with a new car. ;)
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^^^Wot e sed, I believe this battle was fought and won by Indies many years ago, that warranty is not invalidated provided that Manufacturers spec/parts are used. I do not believe that they could use the argument that it had been serviced early as a warranty denial
I suspect they could and would if they suspected it had been DIY'd whilst in warranty. ;)
It'll cost you a lot more if the car develops a problem and you've invalidated your warranty. :(
Yes indeed. With all new car dealer warranties as soon as anyone else, DIY'er or non-dealer garage touch the car in any way, your warranty is invalidated. It is not worth the risk, so just let the dealer do the specified work. As it is a new car, wasn't there a service agreement for 3 years thrown in? The first service was always free in my day, but they were company fleet cars. :y
No this is incorrect Lizzie. It used to be the case, but the law has changed that you can have your car serviced at a VAT registered garage and as long as they use genuine parts, it dosn't affect your warranty. ;)
Some here seem to think that you can DIY with genuine parts as well and not affect your warranty, but I certainly wouldn't want to test that. ::)
I'll be interested to see what Jimmy has to say on this subject as he has to be our resident expert on warranty issues! :y
It is always possible I am out of date on this, but I quote a paragraph from the terms and conditions of a BMW warranty:
"If servicing has been carried out by a Non Authorised Workshop, the Authorised BMW Centre and/or BMW Service Authorised Workshop reserve the right to reject any claim where the cause of the defect is due to inadequate servicing or the use of inadequate parts by the Non Authorised Workshop"
Now, does this not support what I stated? It at least means you would be risking a rejection of any claim for, say, a broken engine component if someone not authorised by BMW has worked on your vehicle, giving them an excuse to do so. The words of Dirty Harry come to mind: "well punk, do you feel lucky...." ;D ;D
How old is that BMW warranty though Lizzie? ??? The law change is fairly recent I think? :-\
It's not beyond the realms of possibility that BMW havn't changed the wording on their warranties to deter people from taking their cars to indy garages. ;)
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^^^Wot e sed, I believe this battle was fought and won by Indies many years ago, that warranty is not invalidated provided that Manufacturers spec/parts are used. I do not believe that they could use the argument that it had been serviced early as a warranty denial
I suspect they could and would if they suspected it had been DIY'd whilst in warranty. ;)
It'll cost you a lot more if the car develops a problem and you've invalidated your warranty. :(
Yes indeed. With all new car dealer warranties as soon as anyone else, DIY'er or non-dealer garage touch the car in any way, your warranty is invalidated. It is not worth the risk, so just let the dealer do the specified work. As it is a new car, wasn't there a service agreement for 3 years thrown in? The first service was always free in my day, but they were company fleet cars. :y
No this is incorrect Lizzie. It used to be the case, but the law has changed that you can have your car serviced at a VAT registered garage and as long as they use genuine parts, it dosn't affect your warranty. ;)
Some here seem to think that you can DIY with genuine parts as well and not affect your warranty, but I certainly wouldn't want to test that. ::)
I'll be interested to see what Jimmy has to say on this subject as he has to be our resident expert on warranty issues! :y
It is always possible I am out of date on this, but I quote a paragraph from the terms and conditions of a BMW warranty:
"If servicing has been carried out by a Non Authorised Workshop, the Authorised BMW Centre and/or BMW Service Authorised Workshop reserve the right to reject any claim where the cause of the defect is due to inadequate servicing or the use of inadequate parts by the Non Authorised Workshop"
Now, does this not support what I stated? It at least means you would be risking a rejection of any claim for, say, a broken engine component if someone not authorised by BMW has worked on your vehicle, giving them an excuse to do so. The words of Dirty Harry come to mind: "well punk, do you feel lucky...." ;D ;D
How old is that BMW warranty though Lizzie? ??? The law change is fairly recent I think? :-\
It's not beyond the realms of possibility that BMW havn't changed the wording on their warranties to deter people from taking their cars to indy garages. ;)
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Block_Exemption_Regulation
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How old is that BMW warranty though Lizzie? ??? The law change is fairly recent I think? :-\
It's not beyond the realms of possibility that BMW havn't changed the wording on their warranties to deter people from taking their cars to indy garages. ;)
.. or that it was never legally enforceable in the first place.
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^^^Wot e sed, I believe this battle was fought and won by Indies many years ago, that warranty is not invalidated provided that Manufacturers spec/parts are used. I do not believe that they could use the argument that it had been serviced early as a warranty denial excuse. :y
I suspect they could and would if they suspected it had been DIY'd whilst in warranty. ;)
It'll cost you a lot more if the car develops a problem and you've invalidated your warranty. :(
Yes indeed. With all new car dealer warranties as soon as anyone else, DIY'er or non-dealer garage touch the car in any way, your warranty is invalidated. It is not worth the risk, so just let the dealer do the specified work. As it is a new car, wasn't there a service agreement for 3 years thrown in? The first service was always free in my day, but they were company fleet cars. :y
No this is incorrect Lizzie. It used to be the case, but the law has changed that you can have your car serviced at a VAT registered garage and as long as they use genuine parts, it dosn't affect your warranty. ;)
Some here seem to think that you can DIY with genuine parts as well and not affect your warranty, but I certainly wouldn't want to test that. ::)
I'll be interested to see what Jimmy has to say on this subject as he has to be our resident expert on warranty issues! :y
It is always possible I am out of date on this, but I quote a paragraph from the terms and conditions of a BMW warranty:
"If servicing has been carried out by a Non Authorised Workshop, the Authorised BMW Centre and/or BMW Service Authorised Workshop reserve the right to reject any claim where the cause of the defect is due to inadequate servicing or the use of inadequate parts by the Non Authorised Workshop"
Now, does this not support what I stated? It at least means you would be risking a rejection of any claim for, say, a broken engine component if someone not authorised by BMW has worked on your vehicle, giving them an excuse to do so. The words of Dirty Harry come to mind: "well punk, do you feel lucky...." ;D ;D
How old is that BMW warranty though Lizzie? ??? The law change is fairly recent I think? :-\
It's not beyond the realms of possibility that BMW havn't changed the wording on their warranties to deter people from taking their cars to indy garages. ;)
It is the current one found online for BMW ;)
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I would also add that back in the day and now it is logical and legally "reasonable" that no main dealer who has a warranty in place for your lovely brand new car is going to put anything right, without an argument, if some grease monkey who hasn't been trained to work on their cars makes a balls up and damages a part. The dealer always has to have full, and sole, responsibity for all servicing during the period of the warranty so it is only them that can be blamed if something goes wrong.
Even if your grease monkey does everything perfectly, the dealer may decline any claim just with the excuse that someone not trained to the standards of their technicians has touched the car. ;)
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I would also add that back in the day and now it is logical and legally "reasonable" that no main dealer who has a warranty in place for your lovely brand new car is going to put anything right, without an argument, if some grease monkey who hasn't been trained to work on their cars makes a balls up and damages a part. The dealer always has to have full, and sole, responsibity for all servicing during the period of the warranty so it is only them that can be blamed if something goes wrong.
Even if your grease monkey does everything perfectly, the dealer may decline any claim just with the excuse that someone not trained to the standards of their technicians has touched the car. ;)
Well as Henry has pointed out the law is the law, so BMW's statement is misleading at best and illegal at worst. ;) What you say above is probably the opinion of most franchised dealers, but I don't believe it has any legal basis these days, and the dealer would have to prove that your indy garage had screwed up in the event of a warranty claim. :y
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I would also add that back in the day and now it is logical and legally "reasonable" that no main dealer who has a warranty in place for your lovely brand new car is going to put anything right, without an argument, if some grease monkey who hasn't been trained to work on their cars makes a balls up and damages a part. The dealer always has to have full, and sole, responsibity for all servicing during the period of the warranty so it is only them that can be blamed if something goes wrong.
Even if your grease monkey does everything perfectly, the dealer may decline any claim just with the excuse that someone not trained to the standards of their technicians has touched the car. ;)
Well as Henry has pointed out the law is the law, so BMW's statement is misleading at best and illegal at worst. ;) What you say above is probably the opinion of most franchised dealers, but I don't believe it has any legal basis these days, and the dealer would have to prove that your indy garage had screwed up in the event of a warranty claim. :y
This year I had to fight a legal claim over a genuine VX part, fitted by Vx technicians at a Vx dealership, with both Vx at Luton and the dealership when neither of them would accept responsibility for a faulty part. I can just imagine the legal fight you would get into fighting your claim with a main dealer for a new engine when someone else has touched the car! ::) ::) :y
Law is the law, but always open to interpretation by clever legal beagles who will charge the earth to fight your case and against your case. ;)
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Unfortunately that's the cross you have to bear when you buy a new car, always found that it pays to try a build a good relationship with the dealership not always possible I know , the only real problems I had were with Ford. Mazda Nissan, Toyota & Mercedes all been excellent & Hyundai were superb, not forgetting my local Vauxhall dealership when I had the Omega..So probably best to let the dealership do the oil change.
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I would also add that back in the day and now it is logical and legally "reasonable" that no main dealer who has a warranty in place for your lovely brand new car is going to put anything right, without an argument, if some grease monkey who hasn't been trained to work on their cars makes a balls up and damages a part. The dealer always has to have full, and sole, responsibity for all servicing during the period of the warranty so it is only them that can be blamed if something goes wrong.
Even if your grease monkey does everything perfectly, the dealer may decline any claim just with the excuse that someone not trained to the standards of their technicians has touched the car. ;)
Well as Henry has pointed out the law is the law, so BMW's statement is misleading at best and illegal at worst. ;) What you say above is probably the opinion of most franchised dealers, but I don't believe it has any legal basis these days, and the dealer would have to prove that your indy garage had screwed up in the event of a warranty claim. :y
This year I had to fight a legal claim over a genuine VX part, fitted by Vx technicians at a Vx dealership, with both Vx at Luton and the dealership when neither of them would accept responsibility for a faulty part. I can just imagine the legal fight you would get into fighting your claim with a main dealer for a new engine when someone else has touched the car! ::) ::) :y
Law is the law, but always open to interpretation by clever legal beagles who will charge the earth to fight your case and against your case. ;)
That is because you are a girlie, Lizzie.
They tend to think you won't make much of a fuss.
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Whilst the good lords' comment may be tongue in cheek, he has a point :-\
Mum had a similar experience with a then brand new Escort. She bought it from a Caffyns dealer shortly before moving, and subsequently had an issue with the car. Gilbert Rice, a long established Ford dealership failed to do little more than patronise her as Caffyns sold the car with their warranty, not a Ford one :o (may have been pre registered, but certainly not a used car), so Ford refused to accept any responsibility inspite of the problem being a design one >:(
They then proceeded to sell her a year old Fiesta to replace it :-X Suffice to say that she discovered Toyota soon after and never looked back :y
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I would also add that back in the day and now it is logical and legally "reasonable" that no main dealer who has a warranty in place for your lovely brand new car is going to put anything right, without an argument, if some grease monkey who hasn't been trained to work on their cars makes a balls up and damages a part. The dealer always has to have full, and sole, responsibity for all servicing during the period of the warranty so it is only them that can be blamed if something goes wrong.
Even if your grease monkey does everything perfectly, the dealer may decline any claim just with the excuse that someone not trained to the standards of their technicians has touched the car. ;)
Well as Henry has pointed out the law is the law, so BMW's statement is misleading at best and illegal at worst. ;) What you say above is probably the opinion of most franchised dealers, but I don't believe it has any legal basis these days, and the dealer would have to prove that your indy garage had screwed up in the event of a warranty claim. :y
This year I had to fight a legal claim over a genuine VX part, fitted by Vx technicians at a Vx dealership, with both Vx at Luton and the dealership when neither of them would accept responsibility for a faulty part. I can just imagine the legal fight you would get into fighting your claim with a main dealer for a new engine when someone else has touched the car! ::) ::) :y
Law is the law, but always open to interpretation by clever legal beagles who will charge the earth to fight your case and against your case. ;)
That is because you are a girlie, Lizzie.
They tend to think you won't make much of a fuss.
And how wrong they were Opti! ;D ;D ;D ;D :y
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Different set up possibly but I know our local Ford stealer has in the past informed customers who wanted to book their cars in for service that it wasn't actually due in terms of either age or mileage,but of course if the customer is insistent then they'll go ahead and do the work.
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Go to local factor, get a 0/30w low saps, full fat.
Most euro 5-6 trucks now use a 5/30 low saps some Iveco use 0/30w low saps.
There are different variants of low saps, and it would appear the correct one has to be used. Its not a case of one is better than the next.
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Why don't you get your oil filter from Volvo. That way you can do the change without anything looking suspect should a Volvo technician be inspecting your car 👍
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I've been getting calls from a Seat dealer regarding my 12 month old leased Ateca, call went along thee lines of how many miles has it done
me: 9k,
them: oh it's definately due a service then we'll get it booked in shall we
me : no problem it's an NHS lease car
them: ok no worries in that case it's due in another year or 10k
me: ::)
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Mine gets done every 12.5k, for several reasons, in order of priority:
1. That’s an oil change every 3.5months and I really cba to lie under the car any more frequently
2. The D5 lump is known to do starship mileage on the standard servicing, so I’m really not worried.
3. A’s we live in a pretty temperate climate, it’s not like the oil is used in adverse conditions (-25 in Sweden or +40 in Spain for example) so the oil isn’t going to be performing on the limits of its spec.
4. That’s what Volvo recommend.
If you are going to go DIY, I can link you an eBay seller that I’ve had good experiences with. Genuine Volvo stuff (sealed, holograms on etc) at very good prices.
When all’s said and done I don’t think there are any meaningful studies on how oil degrades over mileage and whether this degradation has any measurable impact on engine life. If there were, in sure someone would have linked them by now. As far as I can tell, there just seems to be a consensus that “x miles/months is too long for oil to be an engine”. So, without any empirical evidence one way or the other, just change it as often as gives you peace of mind. Because that’s all you can definitively say you’re buying.
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Given that the manufacturers all accept that their engines use X amount of oil per 1,000 km/625 miles, you can reasonably establish the period over which your car will do this... It should be specified in the manual.
ie: a litre every 1,000 km/625 miles engine contains 6 litres of oil, ergo you change the oil and filter every 6,000 km/3,750 miles.
Not suggesting that you actually change the oil in that short a time frame, but you get the idea... ;)
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Why don't you get your oil filter from Volvo. That way you can do the change without anything looking suspect should a Volvo technician be inspecting your car 👍
Interesting point Mr Bear, however- it used to be common practice for manufacturers to mark the factory fitted oil filter in some way to detect this very thing. Vx used to fit black finished oil filters, still marked as VFO93 (or whatever), specifically to tell if a car had an oil change post being built. It wasn’t possible to buy the black filters anywhere else - so the system worked well & trapped people that had gone over miles or time on their first service.
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Mine gets done every 12.5k, for several reasons, in order of priority:
1. That’s an oil change every 3.5months and I really cba to lie under the car any more frequently
2. The D5 lump is known to do starship mileage on the standard servicing, so I’m really not worried.
3. A’s we live in a pretty temperate climate, it’s not like the oil is used in adverse conditions (-25 in Sweden or +40 in Spain for example) so the oil isn’t going to be performing on the limits of its spec.
4. That’s what Volvo recommend.
If you are going to go DIY, I can link you an eBay seller that I’ve had good experiences with. Genuine Volvo stuff (sealed, holograms on etc) at very good prices.
When all’s said and done I don’t think there are any meaningful studies on how oil degrades over mileage and whether this degradation has any measurable impact on engine life. If there were, in sure someone would have linked them by now. As far as I can tell, there just seems to be a consensus that “x miles/months is too long for oil to be an engine”. So, without any empirical evidence one way or the other, just change it as often as gives you peace of mind. Because that’s all you can definitively say you’re buying.
Yes please, could you PM me the details. Ta
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Why don't you get your oil filter from Volvo. That way you can do the change without anything looking suspect should a Volvo technician be inspecting your car 👍
Interesting point Mr Bear, however- it used to be common practice for manufacturers to mark the factory fitted oil filter in some way to detect this very thing. Vx used to fit black finished oil filters, still marked as VFO93 (or whatever), specifically to tell if a car had an oil change post being built. It wasn’t possible to buy the black filters anywhere else - so the system worked well & trapped people that had gone over miles or time on their first service.
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Dangly berries. I bought 20L trade club oil, and was given x4 black filters, few years ago.
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When all’s said and done I don’t think there are any meaningful studies on how oil degrades over mileage and whether this degradation has any measurable impact on engine life. If there were, in sure someone would have linked them by now. As far as I can tell, there just seems to be a consensus that “x miles/months is too long for oil to be an engine”. So, without any empirical evidence one way or the other, just change it as often as gives you peace of mind. Because that’s all you can definitively say you’re buying.
Indeed. We all get in a tizz over mileage because that's the easy thing to measure. My view is that oil deteriorates mostly due to cold starts and cool running, especially in low temperatures. Once the engine is hot (properly hot - i.e. after 20 minutes fast cruising) the oil probably isn't being degraded much if at all. In fact, moisture and contaminants are being expunged from it by evaporation via the breathers. It's the cars that do a lot of cold starts without getting into that mode of operation that need frequent oil changes. I very much doubt your car does more than 2 cold starts a day and gets plenty of hot running in-between them, so is quite kind on its' oil in comparison to one that just does runs a couple of miles to the shops.
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Why don't you get your oil filter from Volvo. That way you can do the change without anything looking suspect should a Volvo technician be inspecting your car 👍
Interesting point Mr Bear, however- it used to be common practice for manufacturers to mark the factory fitted oil filter in some way to detect this very thing. Vx used to fit black finished oil filters, still marked as VFO93 (or whatever), specifically to tell if a car had an oil change post being built. It wasn’t possible to buy the black filters anywhere else - so the system worked well & trapped people that had gone over miles or time on their first service.
.
Dangly berries. I bought 20L trade club oil, and was given x4 black filters, few years ago.
Only repeating what a Vx service manager told me. :-X
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When all’s said and done I don’t think there are any meaningful studies on how oil degrades over mileage and whether this degradation has any measurable impact on engine life. If there were, in sure someone would have linked them by now. As far as I can tell, there just seems to be a consensus that “x miles/months is too long for oil to be an engine”. So, without any empirical evidence one way or the other, just change it as often as gives you peace of mind. Because that’s all you can definitively say you’re buying.
Indeed. We all get in a tizz over mileage because that's the easy thing to measure. My view is that oil deteriorates mostly due to cold starts and cool running, especially in low temperatures. Once the engine is hot (properly hot - i.e. after 20 minutes fast cruising) the oil probably isn't being degraded much if at all. In fact, moisture and contaminants are being expunged from it by evaporation via the breathers. It's the cars that do a lot of cold starts without getting into that mode of operation that need frequent oil changes. I very much doubt your car does more than 2 cold starts a day and gets plenty of hot running in-between them, so is quite kind on its' oil in comparison to one that just does runs a couple of miles to the shops.
Fair point, my usual shortest trip is about 10 miles.
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When all’s said and done I don’t think there are any meaningful studies on how oil degrades over mileage and whether this degradation has any measurable impact on engine life. If there were, in sure someone would have linked them by now. As far as I can tell, there just seems to be a consensus that “x miles/months is too long for oil to be an engine”. So, without any empirical evidence one way or the other, just change it as often as gives you peace of mind. Because that’s all you can definitively say you’re buying.
Unsurprisingly, the oil manufacturers do not publish this. But if you approach them as a car manufacturer (excluding Mercedes ;D) about you actual requirements, you will get more honest answers ;)