Interesting update from Car Care Nut discussing the issues with the VF35A-FTS engine in the Tundra, Sequoia, LX etc...
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Interesting update from Car Care Nut discussing the issues with the VF35A-FTS engine in the Tundra, Sequoia, LX etc...
He's probably one of the most trusted and honest youtube mechanics / reviewers of Toyota/Lexus and other vehicles out there. Master certified Toyota technician. Wouldn't dismiss him so quickly. He grew up in Iraq where the reliability of Toyota engines was a necessity and they depended on them.LOL, his message to owners is to “stay calm” when he was out there with the other influencers getting YouTube clicks stirring things up.
He's probably one of the most trusted and honest youtube mechanics / reviewers of Toyota/Lexus and other vehicles out there. Master certified Toyota technician. Wouldn't dismiss him so quickly. He grew up in Iraq where the reliability of Toyota engines was a necessity and they depended on them.
Are you a quality and production engineer for consumer vehicle engines? Where is the data to dispute his conclusion? We can safely go with 10K mile oil changes? Is it possible the duty cycle/use of a vehicle engine may be markedly different than your environment? I would love to go 10K miles between oil changes! Please elaborate.Someone sent me his video saying that Toyota's 10k OCIs were wrong. Being a quality and production engineer for mass production engines, I was intrigued. How had he come to that conclusion? He said that an engine getting excessive blow by on the piston rings was due to oil change intervals without any data analysis, without considering a manufacturing or design defect, without any deep study into root cause, without any study of how the vehicle was driven, etc. He jumped straight to "the oil changes must not be frequent enough." Easily digestible solution for the layman.
Toyota owners, of course, care about durability above everything else so someone of some authority (a TOYOTA MASTER CERTIFIED TECHNICIAN) telling them that they've been "abusing" their vehicle by following the OEM maintenance schedule is triggering and that drives engagement. He chose to do the YouTube algorithm hot take that will get clicks by being manipulative and offering an easily digestible answer/solution rather than being honest and saying that he didn't truly investigate it. Look at the titles and the thumbnails of his videos. "don't do this one thing!" "is the XYZ worse than the old one?!" He's playing the algorithm. That raises red flags for me.
So are you saying his logic of how oil is circulated through the engine and how he methodically came to the conclusion that trash adhered to the #1 main bearing was incorrect?Someone sent me his video saying that Toyota's 10k OCIs were wrong. Being a quality and production engineer for mass production engines, I was intrigued. How had he come to that conclusion? He said that an engine getting excessive blow by on the piston rings was due to oil change intervals without any data analysis, without considering a manufacturing or design defect, without any deep study into root cause, without any study of how the vehicle was driven, etc. He jumped straight to "the oil changes must not be frequent enough." Easily digestible solution for the layman.
Toyota owners, of course, care about durability above everything else so someone of some authority (a TOYOTA MASTER CERTIFIED TECHNICIAN) telling them that they've been "abusing" their vehicle by following the OEM maintenance schedule is triggering and that drives engagement. He chose to do the YouTube algorithm hot take that will get clicks by being manipulative and offering an easily digestible answer/solution rather than being honest and saying that he didn't truly investigate it. Look at the titles and the thumbnails of his videos. "don't do this one thing!" "is the XYZ worse than the old one?!" He's playing the algorithm. That raises red flags for me.
Are you a quality and production engineer for consumer vehicle engines? Where is the data to dispute his conclusion? We can safely go with 10K mile oil changes? Is it possible the duty cycle/use of a vehicle engine may be markedly different than your environment? I would love to go 10K miles between oil changes! Please elaborate.
So are you saying his logic of how oil is circulated through the engine and how he methodically came to the conclusion that trash adhered to the #1 main bearing was incorrect?
I agree with him, excess ring/bore/bearing wear is due to heat and excessive heat is due to the lack of lubrication. Lack of lubrication is often due to dirty oil. Often starting with a micro piece of something and worsening from there.
So his conclusion of "while the oil probably will last 10K miles, it doesn't hurt anything to change it at 5K is wrong how?
How did you come to your conclusion (quoting you) “without any data analysis, without considering a manufacturing or design defect”?
His deep dive on part number tends to support his conclusion.
"I can't say what is causing it because there are a tons of different ways for the machining debris to manifest and end up at the bearing. Literally every passage that is between the filter and the main galley is a potential. Is it a machining chip that comes from a worn tool? Is it a worn out demurring brush? Washer nozzle knocked out of position? Washer nozzle that was set incorrectly from the machine builder? We don't know."
I wonder if Toyota will ever share the details? However, apparently engines are failing from the U.S. and Japan. This should allow them to narrow it down considerably.
Not having full transparency sucks, but that's the nature of business and people. I can see both sides of the situation having been on both sides.I hear you qberg, but I believe in transparency. I really feel sorry for those with engines that, due to a manufacturing issue, have the potential to seize at any time.