2/ Opening the bonnet at regularly can catch leaks and other problems before they get serious.
I used to deliver a training course where I worked (Castrol) to bring staff up to speed on what oil is, why it’s needed, where it comes from and so on. It was so that non-techy types and new starters had an awareness of what it is we made, even if it was not important to their roles.
I used to include a piece about checking your oil level regularly. There are many benefits:
- if the rate of change changes suddenly you will spot it and can investigate
- keeping the oil level near ‘Max’ means there is more oil in the engine to ‘share the load’
- a small top up now and then adds fresh additives to the mix, like a shot in the arm for the engine.
- you also get to look at the other stuff too.
I would also recommend that people find out exactly what oil the car needs and buy some
before it is needed. People who buy when a light comes on often buy the wrong oil in panic, and pay over the odds for it in a filling station. Spend some time looking up the specs needed, in your own time, in the comfort of your home rather than in the hostile environment of a forecourt, and then order a litre online, where you can get a good deal. Then you know you have it to hand and can top up on your own terms.
Oil specs are a confusion of alphabet spaghetti, it’s no wonder lay people get it wrong. And whilst the ultimate maxim (within reason) is “some oil is better than no oil”, it is even better if you get the right oil. In some cases it can be critical.