Hey guys,
A friend just recently bought a 99 Chevy Prism (read: Toyota Corolla) with a bit over 100,000 miles on it. Almost immediately, she noticed horrible oil consumption, like 1 quart every tank of gas, or worse. She used 10w30 at first, then went to 5w30, since thats what was on the oil cap, and her oil consumption got dramatically worse, to the point where it just about ran dry once. There is no smoke coming out of the back, and no oil on the engine or on the ground.
When she told me about it, I looked for information online. It seems the 1.8 liter engines in the corollas and prisms have bad ring problems. I would think that the fact that there is no oil on the ground means the oil is getting past the rings and burning, and the cat is catching all the fumes, hence no smoke out the back.
Now, if it is the rings, what can we do about it? I told her to switch to a heavier oil, like 10w40, will that help slow it down? Is there an additive we can put in to help slow down the oil leakage? Worst case, is replacing the rings something that I can do? I'm no auto mechanic, but I have some mechanical aptitude. Taking it to a shop would cost as much as the car did, and replacing the engine might not work, possibly ending up with an engine with the same issues.
Suggestions?
A friend just recently bought a 99 Chevy Prism (read: Toyota Corolla) with a bit over 100,000 miles on it. Almost immediately, she noticed horrible oil consumption, like 1 quart every tank of gas, or worse. She used 10w30 at first, then went to 5w30, since thats what was on the oil cap, and her oil consumption got dramatically worse, to the point where it just about ran dry once. There is no smoke coming out of the back, and no oil on the engine or on the ground.
When she told me about it, I looked for information online. It seems the 1.8 liter engines in the corollas and prisms have bad ring problems. I would think that the fact that there is no oil on the ground means the oil is getting past the rings and burning, and the cat is catching all the fumes, hence no smoke out the back.
Now, if it is the rings, what can we do about it? I told her to switch to a heavier oil, like 10w40, will that help slow it down? Is there an additive we can put in to help slow down the oil leakage? Worst case, is replacing the rings something that I can do? I'm no auto mechanic, but I have some mechanical aptitude. Taking it to a shop would cost as much as the car did, and replacing the engine might not work, possibly ending up with an engine with the same issues.
Suggestions?




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