Did oil change intervals increase during the 04. 5 model run? Mine is a very early ISB 325/600 (waited 2 mos. for engine production after my order was placed), and it's book shows a 7000 Schedule A/3250 Schedule B. I thought I saw somebody reference 15000/7500 intervals on a 04. 5 in another thread. If so, did my mine come with a dated manual ("Dodge 2004 RAM TRUCK DIESEL MANINTENACE LOGBOOK" [first edition {2nd run}] 83-003-6204)? Any thoughts on the warranty implications ... does the serial # of the truck rule, or the manuals that came in the glove box?
Regardless, I probably won't change what I have been doing, but all the talk of CJ-4 not being appropriate for longer intervals makes me pause. Here has been my rationale while taking "some" guidance from what may be a very conservative factory maintenance schedule (I'm clearly a Schedule B guy, given towing and Las Vegas temperatures): aside from a 1000 mile change and doing 3250 or so thereafter until 10,000, I have been shooting for 7500 mile changes runnning full synthetic, either Valovoline Premium Blue Exterme or Rotella T, both in 5W-40 per the manual. The truck now has about 54,000 miles. The change I am doing today had no interiem filter change, but I usually put on a new Fleetguard Stratopore at the mid point. I did an analysis after 7500 miles on PBE (around 30,000 on the clock) and the results were so good that I decided I did not need to take the time and money to check it on a regular basis. I'll analyize today's change though. I accidently got a CI-4/CJ-4 mix, because Walmart did not have enough 1 gallon jugs for the whole job. I think the mix was 8 qts. CI-4, 5 qts. CJ-4. It will be interesting to see the test results.
So the fresh oil is now 100% Rotella T CJ-4 Synthetic. Given the reduced longevity of CJ-4, am I wasting my money running syntetic? It is exactly twice the cost of the dino version here in LV, and add another 20 percent had I opted for the PBE again. Maybe it's time to look at some off-highway oils that are still CI-4. Does anybody know what Cummins is specifying for the industrial and marine versions?
On a side note, is it safe to run a Cummins after the oil's drained, shutting down the instant the pressure gauge nudges off normal?
Regardless, I probably won't change what I have been doing, but all the talk of CJ-4 not being appropriate for longer intervals makes me pause. Here has been my rationale while taking "some" guidance from what may be a very conservative factory maintenance schedule (I'm clearly a Schedule B guy, given towing and Las Vegas temperatures): aside from a 1000 mile change and doing 3250 or so thereafter until 10,000, I have been shooting for 7500 mile changes runnning full synthetic, either Valovoline Premium Blue Exterme or Rotella T, both in 5W-40 per the manual. The truck now has about 54,000 miles. The change I am doing today had no interiem filter change, but I usually put on a new Fleetguard Stratopore at the mid point. I did an analysis after 7500 miles on PBE (around 30,000 on the clock) and the results were so good that I decided I did not need to take the time and money to check it on a regular basis. I'll analyize today's change though. I accidently got a CI-4/CJ-4 mix, because Walmart did not have enough 1 gallon jugs for the whole job. I think the mix was 8 qts. CI-4, 5 qts. CJ-4. It will be interesting to see the test results.
So the fresh oil is now 100% Rotella T CJ-4 Synthetic. Given the reduced longevity of CJ-4, am I wasting my money running syntetic? It is exactly twice the cost of the dino version here in LV, and add another 20 percent had I opted for the PBE again. Maybe it's time to look at some off-highway oils that are still CI-4. Does anybody know what Cummins is specifying for the industrial and marine versions?
On a side note, is it safe to run a Cummins after the oil's drained, shutting down the instant the pressure gauge nudges off normal?