North Star Community Credit Union

Making Sense of Your Car Maintenance Schedule

by David Tenenbaum



It's a key selling point: Auto makers finally have figured out how to make their cars travel farther between maintenance appointments. Some of the advances reflect elimination of troublesome carburetors and mechanical ignition systems. Other advances rely on improvements made outside the auto plant, like better oil or tires. Many advances reflect greater use of electronics, which not only need less maintenance but also can monitor your real maintenance needs.

The flip side of reduced maintenance requirements is confusion among some diligent car owners. As Sympatico, msn.com's auto advice site, recently noted: "Many owners are confused about which items need service and often place all vehicle maintenance in this category." Such confusion about reduced maintenance needs can lead, ironically, to undermaintenance, Sympatico reported. "Experts estimate that about 70% of today's vehicle owners neglect routine maintenance on their vehicles, compared with 40% 15 years ago."

What's a car owner to do?

Check each car part, fluid, tire

Tune-up

Many new cars will go 60,000 to 105,000 miles between tune-ups, largely because about the only parts left to tune up are the spark plugs. The troublesome distributor and coil are long gone, and some makes also have replaced heavy, trouble-prone sparkplug wires. Many car makers consider the term tune-up to be obsolete, and prefer routine maintenance instead.

Routine maintenance

Manufacturers set schedules for periodic maintenance, and these are the only reliable guide to what your car needs. Take the owner's manual to the shop when your car's in for periodic maintenance, and insist that the shop follow its recommendations if you're getting shop recommendations for more or more frequent work.

About 70% of vehicle owners neglect routine vehicle maintenance, compared with 40% 15 years ago.

Consumer Reports checked prices for a 60,000-mile service on a Nissan and found that dealer prices ranged from $269 to $1,078. "Most dealers went well beyond the recommendations in the owner's manual," the magazine reported. "A few added services Nissan advises against, such as putting additives in the fuel and oil."

In all automotive matters, follow the manufacturer's lead. They know your vehicle better than you. As maintenance intervals get longer, some unscrupulous shops may profit from confusion by gently suggesting that a bit of extra maintenance is a good thing. It is—for them.

Final maintenance notes

Useful resources

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Published May 12, 2008



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Printed Sunday, July 6, 2008

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