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Honda CR-V Maintenance and Repair

6451 messages, Last post on Dec 06, 2009 at 2:35 PM
You are in the Honda CR-V Forum. Your Hosts are steve_ & tidester
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Lately the wiper blades on my 2003 CRV have been acting up. Under normal setting, they sometimes act like they are on the high setting or even higher. The one my drivers side hits so hard it looks and sounds like it will fly off at any time. At other times it is normal. Is there any type of adjustment or could this be a sign the wiper motor is acting up. Thanks |
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| Our 2007 doesn't get to 15% oil life remaining until 10,000 miles! Did that on the first oil change and again on the next oil change as well. My dealer doesn't have a service manager at the moment but the service advisor assures me that is pretty normal on a CRV that doesn't see a lot of hard and/or city driving. I figured they must use synthetic oil but they tell me it is not. I'm really skeptical about this !! I want this car to run for 300K and don't think such long oil change intervals will get me there. Are there any long term Honda owners out there that have been doing this for a couple hundred thousand miles? | |
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Replying to: sailorboy1 (May 04, 2009 2:46 pm)
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Replying to: tomk17 (May 04, 2009 3:17 pm) Regards, OW |
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Replying to: sailorboy1 (May 04, 2009 2:46 pm) THEN I would use good synthetic oil like Mobile 1 or AMSoil, and a good filter (mobile 1, Purolator Pure-One, AMSoil) every 5000 to 6000 miles. If you said NO to at least two of the conditions above (like me), then I would stick to the usual 3000 mile interval, of course still using quality synthetic oil and a good filter. If you continue to use conventional oil, I would never pass 3 months or 3000 miles whichever comes first, no matter what the conditions. Anyone with the initiative can perform their own test.... change your oil and filter and check it, paying particular attention to the color and odor. Using a clean white napkin to wipe off the dipstick is a good way. Then repeat checking the color and odor weekly until the oil begins to get dark, and/or starts smelling like varnish. That is when you should change it, and the number of miles you have on it at that time should be your interval. Using less expensive oil and fram filters, mine was getting bad at way less than 3000 miles. I now use only Mobile 1 Extended performance oil and Pure One filters, and I could go to maybe 3500 or 4000 miles, but I don't. 3000 is my limit. |
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Replying to: dagwood2 (May 04, 2009 5:17 pm) The Dark Oil Myth Are oil changes every 3,000 miles really needed? I use dead dino in my minivan and have pushed the usual recommended 7,500 interval out to 11,000 miles at least once. It's a '99 and ~133,000 miles on it. Oil's a lot better than it used to be. If you really want to know what shape your oil is in, pay the $20 for an analysis. |
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Replying to: dagwood2 (May 04, 2009 5:17 pm) I have NOT seen proof that 3-5K mile oil changes extend the life of the engine. I HAVE however seen first hand proof that 10K mile changes with synthetic oil and a good filter does not impact the life of the engine.
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Replying to: sailorboy1 (May 04, 2009 2:46 pm) My M.M. told me for oil change after first 5,000 miles, then 8,000 miles later and MM shows I still have 40% left. I think may be a change of acceleration habit, now I accelerate slower and off the gas pedal earlier. |
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Replying to: tomk17 (May 05, 2009 5:00 am) So if you want all that junk floating around your engine for 5-7k miles, go ahead. I like my car.
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Replying to: dagwood2 (May 05, 2009 9:25 am) |
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