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I have a '99 Forrester that is gulping 3 quarts of oil every 1,500-2,000 miles. No oil spots on the driveway and no excessive smoking from the exhaust. I'm also surprized that I have no other apparent mechanical problems. From reading the board, burning oil seems common, but this is excessive.

 

I'd like to keep this car for a few more years (currently 90,000 miles on it) because my son can use it for college. I'll be taking it to the dealer soon. What should I tell them to look for/repair?

 

I'm new to the board, so thanks for any and all replies.

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Hi,

 

Hope it isn't finding its way into the coolant. Have you checked the condition of your coolant? I suppose it's possible that the coolant overflow tank is filling up and then dumping the excess out, but you'd probably have noticed it.

 

Regards,

Adnan

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Absolutely no oil has ever spilled, dripped or smoked - I've been looking for it for the last year. I personally replace the oil at regular intervals when the "check engine" lite comes on (effectively meaning the oil is down 3 quarts). I've never inspected the antifreeze resevoir for oil, so I'll take a look.

 

Thanks for the ideas.

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Sometimes a consumption like this can mean that a valve seal or guide is shot. Oil is getting drawn in thru the valve stem area. It will get burned, and you won't really notice it. The consumption is excessive, but if you consider how many revolutions your engine goes thru in a 1000 miles, this is a mircroscopic drop per rev. (I once read that if you consumed one drop per piston stroke, you'd burn up a quart in about 2 miles!)

 

And... you should not let your oil level drop by 3 quarts before adding! :eek:

 

Commuter

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Could be a clogged PCV valve or hose. Be sure it's operating properly. Also check the inside of the air filter housing. Remove the filter and look where the hoses connect from the valve covers. There is usually a small amount of oil residue here. If there is a lot, then the crankcase pressure is high due to either the PCV system not functioning properly, or worn rings which at 90K would be rare.

 

I have seen many clogged PCV hoses or valves over the years causing high oil consumption. Most with little or no telltale blue smoke from the exhaust.

Without any external leaks, or internal passage leaks (oil in antifreeze), then the engine is consuming the oil. You must then determine how it's getting into the combustion camber, maybe worn valve guides?

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I personally replace the oil at regular intervals when the "check engine" lite comes on (effectively meaning the oil is down 3 quarts)
I assume you mean the oil pressure light. This light doesn't mean that the oil is low per se, it means that the engine has inadequate oil pressure. That is extremely bad for the engine. I like to keep the level near full, but at the very least never let it get so low that you can't see it on the dipstick. This kind of abuse over a period of time could contribute to engine damage and wear that will increase oil consumption.

 

Also, oil change interval, oil type, viscosity, driving style?

 

Changing the PCV valve is good advice.

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Also, oil change interval, oil type, viscosity, driving style?

 

 

Change the oil and filter every 3,000 - 5,000 miles. Subaru dealer does the oil/filter changes, so I'm not sure what they use, but I refill engine with 5W-30 Castrol GTX when oil gets low. The first 60K was long commute driving (45 miles each way to work), from 60K-90K has been short commute to daily work (5-10 minutes each way). Lots of hills here in PA, but no aggressive driving.

 

BTW, I checked the antifreeze and see no oil residue. I'll check the air filter casing and PVC value.

 

Thanks all.

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I would check would be the PCV system. After that the seals. These are the cheapest repairs and after that it usually gets expensive. I have a 99 Forester also that uses about a pint to an oil change. I have about 105,000 miles and all seals and the oil slinger back by the clutch were changed around 90,000 miles when it got new head gaskets and clutch.

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I have a '99 Forrester that is gulping 3 quarts of oil every 1,500-2,000 miles. No oil spots on the driveway and no excessive smoking from the exhaust. I'm also surprized that I have no other apparent mechanical problems. From reading the board, burning oil seems common, but this is excessive.

 

I'd like to keep this car for a few more years (currently 90,000 miles on it) because my son can use it for college. I'll be taking it to the dealer soon. What should I tell them to look for/repair?

 

I'm new to the board, so thanks for any and all replies.

Hi Jeff,

 

This is an interesting problem. We all learn from the experience of other posters. Please post the results when you have the car serviced. Thanks.

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  • 2 months later...

Just to finish this thread and to update the curious ...

 

I took the '99 Forester back to the Subaru dealership (third trip) and was told at high RPM the car DID blow a little blue smoke. They couldn't tell me if it was the rings or pistons or seals or whatever. Even though their thorough assesment ;-) was comforting, I opted to buy a new Forrester and trade-in the problem. I still got a fair deal, but I would have preferred to buy another make. Unfortunately, it's my wife's car and she likes the Forester. She doesn't have to deal with the problems.

 

My advice to all car dealers: Pay more attention to complete and quality customer service in your service departments and resell business will go through the roof. Most dealers only care about sales. I ask you all - How valuable is a trusted mechanic and service station??

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  • 2 months later...

I gotta say that I hope no one else does some of the things from this thread. Waiting until the low oil pressure light comes on to add oil is insane. The engine is down 3 quarts? It only holds about 4! That light is a "holy cow you're out of oil" kinda light, not a "think about putting some oil in when you wish" light.

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