A brief test of the million-mile 325 - craig-pd130

Brief test here:

www.telegraph.co.uk/motoring/environment/5570566/M...l

The tester makes a good point: don't those old 3-series look small these days?
A brief test of the million-mile 325 - craig-pd130

that's interesting, I thought the car had done the million on a rolling road only. The driver's seat must have been a bit saggy ....
A brief test of the million-mile 325 - Cliff Pope
It says in the report the first million was on a rolling road. So it must have been spray-on sweat.
The 'Million Mile' Beemer. - Hector Brocklebank
In the Telegraph motoring section: tinyurl.com/mlu3ht

I remember there being a Mobil 1 exhibition at a big motor-racing event many years ago where they had details of this very project on display. If I remember rightly they had a photograph of the cylinder block when new and after 1m miles and I was unable to tell any difference, although I was only a nipper!

To my mind this is a marvellous advert for the benefits of fully synthetic engine oil. It must surely be a major contributary factor towards the unprecedented levels of reliability and longevity of modern motor-cars.
The 'Million Mile' Beemer. - TheOilBurner
Or is it a great advert for BMW straight-sixes?

Shame they didn't pick out a couple of other cars at the same time to do this experiment on, say a Ford Escort 1.6 CVH and a VW Golf GTI?
The 'Million Mile' Beemer. - brum
It was stripped down and rebuilt by selected BMW engineers i.e. it was blueprinted.

I expect with the price they charge for Mobil 1 fully synth and 6000 mile interval for the engine to last at least 1,000,000,000 miles

If they did 2 - 4 miles journeys and the engine allowed to cool down in between in variable English winter weather, the condensation in the engine/ lack of correct operating temperatures and fuel dilution would surely lead to a different picture.

Edited by brum on 23/06/2009 at 17:31

The 'Million Mile' Beemer. - oilrag
Not that impressive really. Four years of constant running on a rolling road - never cooling down except for a 6,000 oil change. No expansion and contraction of different metals then putting gaskets under strain and no moisture from cold running.

Hydrodynamic lubrication at the crank constantly and only loss of oil pressure through the whole system at oil change. No overnight `dry` starts for the rings and bores and I bet the engine run at its optimal speed for longevity.

It`s nothing really is it when contrasted with a `cheap` family saloon turning in 100,000+ miles of grueling stop start normal use with a lessor non synthetic oil with changes that sometimes run over the recommended interval - and with thousands of cold start expansion contraction cycles.