I've recently watched a video about a guy who owns an X5M (2010 model) and rags it 120 mph+ almost every day. The car has been driven in very harsh conditions and regularly to its maximum limits.
After having driven the car for 100k miles, he noticed some blue smoke coming out from the exhausts, so he decided to strip the engine and inspect everything properly.
Without going into too much details, the mechanics who stripped the engine were amazed how clean and spotless it was inside, despite the fact how the car has been used all this time.
According to the owner, he changed oil + filter on the car every 3k miles, which is why the engine is in pretty much as new condition after 5 years of very aggressive use and 100k miles.
This is obviously ignoring official BMW recommended oil change intervals, which are usually at least 7.5k miles, and this also goes against what most manufacturers recommend nowadays - probably the average being about 10k miles for an oil change.
So I started reading a bit more about this and came across many articles saying that the "3k miles oil change" is a myth and it was only useful 30-40 years, when the engines weren't so sophisticated and oil quality standards were of course different as well.
One could argue saying low mileage oil change intervals are there to scare people and get them to spend money on changing oil, which is perfectly usable for a longer period.
On the other hand, you could also say that longer oil change intervals are recommended to SHORTEN the life of an engine, so ultimately you will still come back to the dealer for inevitable repairs or end up just buying a new car altogether.
I personally think the above scenario makes perfect sense, especially today, when gone are the days of making solid/long-lasting cars, because now it's all about recycling/squeezing every penny out of a customer and a very short life-span of models (notice how often manufacturers come up with facelifts?)
Your thoughts?








