Fair question. For me, between Ensenada and Florida, I will do around 5000 nms, approx 750 engine hours - 7-8 oil changes at the oft-stated 100-hour interval. To date, I've had a few runs where I've done 100-hours in 10-days or so. To further complicate the equation, getting high quality diesel oil is not easy. Getting rid of used oil isn't always easy either. I won't argue the expense, but will mention the environmental considerations of discarding oil that has a lot of life left in it (if that is indeed true).
For years, I have run extended hours/miles/time on my truck engine which is now getting close to 23 years old. The manual says to change the oil at 5,000 highway miles. I try to change around 15,000ish miles. Used Oil Analysis says I am throwing away good oil at 15,000ish miles.
If I had followed the manual, I would have used 42 quarts vs 14 for the same mileage. That is throwing away quite a bit of oil, money, and time for no good reason.
Oil has changed a LOT over the years. Project Farm YouTuber channel was given a can of 70-year old Quaker State motor oil that he had analyzed (click
HERE and the YouTube will start at the discussion of analysis). It has no additives, no dispersants, and the TBN in this fresh oil is 0.4 -
well below the 1.0 threshold.
Blackstone Labs bought some old and ancient oil of Ebay years ago and tested it. The oil was still good despite the age. Some oils had similar additives as similar oils of today while other were different. I can't find that article unfortunately. But my take away is oil just sitting in a can is not really aging but what is in the oil can be different than today's oil.
Long way around the horn to say: given the improvements in lubricants, is the 100-hour/1-year guidance still relevant? Or are we just kicking-the can out of ignorance of better data?
It is ignorance, but changing oil and filter per the manual, is the safest thing to do. A used oil test is not cheap, and certainly for some engines that don't hold much oil, just changing the oil could be the cheaper thing to do vs testing the oil. During the pandemic, my truck engine went over three years between oil changes. I did not mean for that to happen but that is life. I changed the oil with 10,000-12,000 miles on the oil and the used oil test said I threw away good oil. The numbers were as they should be.
I guess the best data would be some sort of trending showing decline of TBN vs engine hours. Sure, would vary by individual engine, but would be very interesting.
Peter
What is indicating it is time, or not, to change oil is TBN for my engine. I have never had a low enough TBN that required an oil change. The TBN was still at a good level at 15,000-16,000 miles. Some other numbers were "aging" but still within allowable ranges. TBN does go down with miles/hours but I have yet to get the oil down to where the TBN is almost gone.
Now, I did not just say one day that I am going to run 15,000 miles in my engine and just put the miles/time on the oil. I changed oil per the manual, originally on 15w40 oil, then with 0w40 and 5w40 synthetics, and sent the oil off for testing. The lab said the oil was fine, try another X number of miles. So I did, and repeated the test. The lab said try another X number of miles until I worked up to the 15,000is mile mark. I can go longer on the oil but 15,000ish miles seems good enough.
I am also driving highway miles vs city miles and it does make a difference. Idling the engine, or not having the engine loaded correctly, has put fuel in the engine oil. That happened on my truck and tractor engine and showed up in the oil tests. Thankfully, the fuel was in the allowable range but who wants fuel in their oil... So how one operates the engine matters as well as the oil. The only way to really know what is happening with the oil/engine is to test the used oil.