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Car Forum / Toyota / Toyota Cars / March 2007

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New Yaris

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Reasoned Insanity - 08 Mar 2007 03:14 GMT
My girlfriend just bought a brand new Yaris and being that I've never owned
a brand new car before I don't know anything about the proper maintenance of
one. When should I switch over to Mobile 1 and all the other little things
that come with a new vehicle.
Wolfgang - 08 Mar 2007 03:24 GMT
The owner's manual is best place to start - it has complete recommended
maintenance schedule.  Do more that the book and you are generally throwing
$ away.  I'm not big advocate of synthetic oil - Dino based is still
cheapest and very effective. Use a quality filter (OEM is good and
reasonably priced) and change oil every 3-5k miles.

> My girlfriend just bought a brand new Yaris and being that I've never
> owned a brand new car before I don't know anything about the proper
> maintenance of one. When should I switch over to Mobile 1 and all the
> other little things that come with a new vehicle.
Chris Dugan - 09 Mar 2007 21:13 GMT
> The owner's manual is best place to start - it has complete recommended
> maintenance schedule.  Do more that the book and you are generally throwing
> $ away.  I'm not big advocate of synthetic oil - Dino based is still
> cheapest and very effective. Use a quality filter (OEM is good and
> reasonably priced) and change oil every 3-5k miles.

What on earth do you guys do to your cars that requires such frequent oil
changes? It's the exact same car we get here in Europe that Toyota specify
needs servicing every 10K miles not 3 to 5k!

Your garages must be laughing all the way to the bank every oil change! Most
other manufacturers specify longer service intervals (12-18K miles on some
makes) with oil changes at those time NOT before, mind you that is with long
life semi-synth oil at the higher end of that range.

All my life I have never owned or seen a manufacturer reccomend a car (my
first was a 1985 Mini with a 1 litre Austin A series pushrod lump) that
needed such frequent servicing.

Chris
bigty - 08 Mar 2007 06:05 GMT
> My girlfriend just bought a brand new Yaris and being that I've never owned
> a brand new car before I don't know anything about the proper maintenance of
> one. When should I switch over to Mobile 1 and all the other little things
> that come with a new vehicle.

http://www.carislife.com
Mike Hunter - 08 Mar 2007 20:58 GMT
The best advice you can  get is read the Toyota owners manual and do exactly
what maintenance  is required, when it is required, and your will get the
best service from you car, WBMA

mike

> My girlfriend just bought a brand new Yaris and being that I've never
> owned a brand new car before I don't know anything about the proper
> maintenance of one. When should I switch over to Mobile 1 and all the
> other little things that come with a new vehicle.
Jeff - 08 Mar 2007 23:25 GMT
> The best advice you can  get is read the Toyota owners manual and do
> exactly what maintenance  is required, when it is required, and your will
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>> maintenance of one. When should I switch over to Mobile 1 and all the
>> other little things that come with a new vehicle.

What is "WBNA?"

Thanks.

Jeff
Reasoned Insanity - 09 Mar 2007 00:08 GMT
>> The best advice you can  get is read the Toyota owners manual and do
>> exactly what maintenance  is required, when it is required, and your will
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
>
> Jeff

Thanks for the advise guys...World Beard and Moustache Association Jeff.
Jeff - 09 Mar 2007 00:13 GMT
>>> The best advice you can  get is read the Toyota owners manual and do
>>> exactly what maintenance  is required, when it is required, and your
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
>
> Thanks for the advise guys...World Beard and Moustache Association Jeff.

thanks. Must be the mega dealership that Mike worked for.

Jeff
Tegger - 09 Mar 2007 00:57 GMT
>>>> The best advice you can  get is read the Toyota owners manual and
>>>> do exactly what maintenance  is required, when it is required, and
[quoted text clipped - 17 lines]
>
> thanks. Must be the mega dealership that Mike worked for.

It's actually an acronym for: "Would Be My Advice".

I like "World Beard and Moustache Association" better though.

Signature

Tegger

Jeff - 09 Mar 2007 01:02 GMT
<...>

> It's actually an acronym for: "Would Be My Advice".

I have seen it before, but I didn't know what it meant.

Thanks.

> I like "World Beard and Moustache Association" better though.

I do too.

Jeff
Wickeddoll® - 09 Mar 2007 01:38 GMT
"Tegger" ...
> "Jeff" :
>
[quoted text clipped - 26 lines]
>
> I like "World Beard and Moustache Association" better though.

TEGGER! Dude - good to see you again.

:-)

Natalie
Tegger - 09 Mar 2007 12:55 GMT
>> Tegger
>
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>
> Natalie

I'm gonna try to stick to ON-topic stuff now.

Beards and moustaches aren't on-topic, but it was funny.

Signature

Tegger

larry moe 'n curly - 09 Mar 2007 04:01 GMT
> >>> What is "WBNA?"

> >> Thanks for the advise guys...World Beard and Moustache Association

> > thanks. Must be the mega dealership that Mike worked for.

> It's actually an acronym for: "Would Be My Advice".
>
> I like "World Beard and Moustache Association" better though.

WBMA also means "Well, bless my a.s."
larry moe 'n curly - 09 Mar 2007 03:57 GMT
> My girlfriend just bought a brand new Yaris and being that I've never owned
> a brand new car before I don't know anything about the proper maintenance of
> one. When should I switch over to Mobil 1 and all the other little things
> that come with a new vehicle.

If she has her maintenance done by a garage, she should tell them to
perform only the services required by Toyota and listed in the owner's
manual (maybe for severe duty use, as opposed to normal use) because
some garages try to sell lots of extras that can double or even triple
the cost.  Dealerships are notorious for this.

According to Mobil, cars can be switched to Mobil 1 immediately, and
they recommend that it be left in the crankcase for the longest
interval allowed by the manufacturer.

If she gets the transmission fluid changed, she should allow only the
factory recommended fluid be used, not something like LubeGuard
additive mixed in with ordinary Dexron/Mercon fluid, which a lot of
quickie lube places use.

It probably wouldn't hurt to change the brake fluid every two years,
to prevent rust.
Pete Moss - 09 Mar 2007 13:25 GMT
snip

> It probably wouldn't hurt to change the brake fluid every two years,
> to prevent rust.

That's advice I don't think I've beard before. I'm surprised that
rusting would be a problem inside a sealed system like modern brake
mechanisms.
Tegger - 09 Mar 2007 14:09 GMT
Pete Moss <spraghnum@yahoo.com> wrote in news:spraghnum-
F27BE1.08250309032007@news.iglou.com:

> snip
>>
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> rusting would be a problem inside a sealed system like modern brake
> mechanisms.

Brake systems are NEVER sealed. Not ever.

And by changing the fluid, you're not preventing "rust", you're preventing
gum, sludge, and aluminum corrosion.

Change brake fluid every two years, regardless of mileage, and have the ABS  
system fluid changed at the same time.

Signature

Tegger

larry moe 'n curly - 09 Mar 2007 17:40 GMT
> > It probably wouldn't hurt to change the brake fluid every two years,
> > to prevent rust.
>
> That's advice I don't think I've beard before. I'm surprised that
> rusting would be a problem inside a sealed system like modern brake
> mechanisms.

Here's a brake fluid FAQ:  www.aa1car.com/library/bfluid.htm

I don't know about cars with ABS, but I remember the fluid turning
dark in my father's car, which had a sealed master cylinder reservior,
and I've read that about half of the moisture is absorbed right
through the rubber brake lines.
 
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