Anyone in the market for a midsize car? I was.

   / Anyone in the market for a midsize car? I was. #81  
RollingsFarms, we got the Titanium with the Ecoboost engine. Sorry about the late response, haven't checked this thread in a few days. This thing is loaded. We keep vehicles a long time to get the most out of them so tend to get the loaded options.
 
   / Anyone in the market for a midsize car? I was. #82  
Ask around, if you don't know the reputation of the dealer already. Sometimes (under factory pressure, unofficially) a dealer will deliberately overfill, to avoid documenting oil consumption on a known defect - it is a pretty old story.

Rgds, D.

I've been dealing with this dealer since 2003 and have had good service from them, but I think you're right on this one. As soon as I mentioned the oil consumption, oil changes from the dealer resulted in an overfill situation. I did wonder, like you stated, that maybe this is a Honda policy on the V6s that consume oil. That or the dealer is overfilling them as a bit of insurance against the average customer that never checks his/her oil level between changes.
 
   / Anyone in the market for a midsize car? I was. #83  
Not any type of Honda policy. Just crappy dealer work.
 
   / Anyone in the market for a midsize car? I was. #84  
I've owned and wrenched on almost all the brands available in the US. Honda and Toyota have always been the best and easiest to work on. The components used are far and away better than most of the others and crush so called domestic cars. Right now we have a Jeep, 2 Hondas and an Audi. The Audi is the newest at an 01. My daughters Civic is a 92 with about 250k on it and it still purrs. The other Honda is an 00 van with over 150k. The trannies are weak in this van but Honda replaced it for free at 85k and I was the second owner. I don't see the domestics doing that. Jeep is a 99 with 135k and is rotting away, front end parts, drums, rotors replaced twice, mufflers/pipes multiple times. Van only had the pads replaced and tires. A couple other minor issues. Niece has a 99 Camry, can't kill that thing. I'll be sticking with Toyota or Honda.

The Hondas do seem to prefer Michelin tires.
 
   / Anyone in the market for a midsize car? I was. #85  
Used to be that by the time the oil light came on the damage was done. Maybe they are using more sensitive sensing circuits.
 
   / Anyone in the market for a midsize car? I was. #86  
My wife drives an '08 Accrod V6, which was my car until we traded in her Pilot on my '10 F-150. Car has about 50K on it now. I will agree with comments that it has a lot of road noise, especially compared to my F-150, but of course you're riding a lot closer to the road in any sedan vs pickup. I don't agree that it's boring to drive, especially with the V6, which is peppy when you step on it. I find it rather sporty to drive, and the original Michellins are holding up well. I will say that we could never get the Honda dealer to properly balance the tires but getting a road force balance at my Ford dealer fixed that and it's never driven as well as it does now. One minor issue is that the plastic seat base trim on the driver's side popped loose and would require a complete seat removal to put it back together, so I'm gonna try gluing it first, and if that doesn't work, maybe a trim head screw inconspicuously placed may be in order.

I think '08 was the first year Honda put variable cylinder mgt on the V6's, so it runs on either 3 or 4 cylinders when possible, which is usually highway driving. I have mixed opinions on it. I do like the added milage you get when highway cruising - did 30 mpg on a long trip back from NC. But, I find that without the cruise on, I have to concentrate on holding a steady speed, otherwise it tends to drop MPH if you're not constantly re-adjusting pedal position manually. This is more of an issue when driving hillier terrain and at speeds under about 65 mph. If you can run the car at 75 mph or higher, it holds speed much better with the VCM kicking in and out. Now, the real issues is that about 2 years ago when the car had around 30K on it, the check engine light came on when my wife was coming home from shopping. She said the car ran real rough and wouldn't make any power (but of course she drove it home anyway). Since it was under warranty, I had it flatbedded to the dealer. The diagnoses was fouled plugs on 2 of the cylinders and a needed computer update. After experiencing this issue, seems there are quite a few similar issues posted on line by other V6 owners.

To boot, the car has always used some oil between changes, which we do every 5k. It will use about 1-1.5 quarts between oil changes, which of course the dealer says is within spec. I am watching to see if it gets any worse. This is the first new car we've owned that uses oil. Have had 4-5 Toyotas, a Honda Pilot and several Subaru's that never used oil. My F-150 seems fine so far. I still like the car overall and if the oil consumption doesn't get any worse and we don't have any more fouled plug issues, I'd be keeping it for as long as possible, but we'll see.

An unfortunate Accord V6 update. Check engine light came on again last week for two days. On the day I decided to take it into the dealer it went out. I still dropped by the dealer but since the light was out and the wait to read the codes was 1.5 hours I decided not to wait. I had reset the gas cap a day earlier. Service consultant said it was probably a loose gas cap and not to worry if the light was out. Okie dokie!

A week later, this morning in fact, I started up the car and both the check engine and VSM (stability control) lights came on. Shut it off and restarted and just the check engine light came on. We decided since we were doing some errands down near the dealer to just bring it in. This time the light stayed on. Again, the wait was estimated at 1.5 hours before they could get to it. When they finally read the codes, it was four fouled plugs. This is about 17K miles after the same issue 2 years ago. The good news is they replaced all four plugs and did a computer update for no charge. They're lucky they didn't try to charge me, cause I would not have prevented my wife from ripping them a new one - she can get quite excited if you know what I mean.

Anyway, I realized that both incidents happened soon after long highway trips where the engine was running on less than 6 cylinders. First time was a few weeks after we took a trip to NC. This time, we had driven to Philadelphia to visit our daughter the weekend before. Of course the service manager, who I spoke to, said he wasn't aware of any issues like this on the V6's with VCM (variable cylinder mgt). However, the service consultant said he's seen a few cases, which I interpret as probably more than just a few. But, he said he has an accord V6, same year and hasn't had any issues with it. I guess we're just the lucky ones. I do think some of these V6's with VCM have this issue. I have seen reports on line. I have to admit, we are going to seriously consider trading it for a small SUV, which my wife would prefer anyway. I hate to have to trade out of a car that's paid for and that I really like driving otherwise. It's that or change the plugs every two years and keep topping off the oil.
 
   / Anyone in the market for a midsize car? I was. #87  
Chris - thanks for the update.

If it was my car, and was past warranty, I'd look into shutting Off/locking out the cylinder De-Activation, as a test. Not sure if a dealer would play ball on that move, you may need an independent Honda specialist. With any luck, it would just take a high-end diagnostic programmer to lock Off the VCM.

Under certain conditions (long distance driving, ultra flat roads, no head-wind) I can see the de-activated pistons running relatively cool - a challenge for the ring metallurgy, and a possible explanation for higher oil consumption.

If the oil consumption went down with the VCM locked Off, I'd be tempted to just leave it locked Off. Unless you regularily drive across the continent, I'd take the slight hit on mileage over the behaviour you're seeing.

Changing plugs at 17k almost puts you back to an early '70s leaded gas maintenance cycle - I'd try and address this by shutting the VCM
off. Depending how that worked out then I'd look at the new SUV. :2cents:

Rgds, D.
 
   / Anyone in the market for a midsize car? I was. #88  
This is one of the many reasons I will not own a truck or car with cylinder deactivation. Too many side effect issues.

Chris
 
   / Anyone in the market for a midsize car? I was. #89  
Chris - thanks for the update.

If it was my car, and was past warranty, I'd look into shutting Off/locking out the cylinder De-Activation, as a test. Not sure if a dealer would play ball on that move, you may need an independent Honda specialist. With any luck, it would just take a high-end diagnostic programmer to lock Off the VCM.

Under certain conditions (long distance driving, ultra flat roads, no head-wind) I can see the de-activated pistons running relatively cool - a challenge for the ring metallurgy, and a possible explanation for higher oil consumption.

If the oil consumption went down with the VCM locked Off, I'd be tempted to just leave it locked Off. Unless you regularily drive across the continent, I'd take the slight hit on mileage over the behaviour you're seeing.

Changing plugs at 17k almost puts you back to an early '70s leaded gas maintenance cycle - I'd try and address this by shutting the VCM
off. Depending how that worked out then I'd look at the new SUV. :2cents:

Rgds, D.

Instead of waiting for the dealer to tell you what your fault code is you could try an android app called torque. The app is $5 and an it connects via Bluetooth to a dongle you can buy at Amazon for $20.
It gives you all the fault codes and lots more info on your car like the expensive diagnostic machines.
 
   / Anyone in the market for a midsize car? I was. #90  
Instead of waiting for the dealer to tell you what your fault code is you could try an android app called torque. The app is $5 and an it connects via Bluetooth to a dongle you can buy at Amazon for $20.
It gives you all the fault codes and lots more info on your car like the expensive diagnostic machines.

Last Fall, a friend of mine showed me something similar that he uses. Good value for the money, and can read many fault codes. What I was talking about (VCM elimination) likely needs a dealer level tool, or at least a high end pro scanner - you are basically changing operating parameters in the engine 'puter - either that or you need a hardware solution - if you know what sensors the engine computer reads to activate the VCM, you may be able to fool it into thinking conditions are never right for operation.

Remember when we just drove cars and only played games on computers ? Unfortunately, combining the two leads to discussions like this !

Rgds, D.
 

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