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Change it at whatever you normal change interval is (I used 5,000 miles out of convenience). Doesn't matter if it -15 or 110 degrees. Ride the bike for a few miles then come in and once the mufflers cool down enough so you don't burn yourself do your oil change.
I've often wondered about the "change when warm" oil-change thing, whether it's maybe like the "don't swim for 30 minutes after you've eaten".I drain my old oil into a drip pan. I then empty the drip pan into my recycle tank, turning it upside down over it. On a hot day with hot oil, the drip pan will be as oil-free as it's going to get in an hour. On a cold day with cold oil, it takes most of the day, but it still all comes out.If the bike isn't going anywhere and you're not in a hurry, is it really that important for it to be warm? If you pull the plug, put a big "NO OIL" ribbon on the key, and let it go a day or two, I think it'll drain just as thoroughly as if it's warm. Of course, if you're trying to do the whole thing in 30 minutes, it would make a difference, but that's not always the case.Lannis
The only sure answer is to sample and send it to a lab and check.As someone who spent ~30 years in PA (Lehigh, Delaware, and Chester Counties) and who routinely rode in winter, and who used synthetic fluids with extended intervals, I'll say wait till spring.At least assuming you garage it.I have literally never changed the oil just cause winter eat approaching. I've not only never had an oil related failure, as I've worked as a tech I've never even seen one.Now that I think about it, how many complaints so you read about breakdowns on forums all over the net? And when was the last time you heard about one the was caused by acid etching from oil changes that weren't frequent enough.Crap the worst I ever saw was this accountant who opened a beer brewing supply store and rented a Acura Shortly before the lease was up he asked me to check his oil. I was surprised that nothing was on the dipstick. Seemed that after 3 years and no oil changes or adding any it was not showing. There was definitely sludge in the motor, and we didn't disassemble to the point of bearing caps. But once we cleaned out as best we could there was no obvious damage.I don't think we should plan to fail like that, but I do think we often erw on the side of paranoia.
Point of order on the "acids staying in all winter".There either are acids (and the oil additive package is used up and damage is occurring) or there aren't acids and there's nothing to save the engine from.Changing oil by time or mileage is a guessing game of staying ahead of the end of the additive package.In the hot vs cold thing I don't think it's a big deal either way. It obviously flows better warm and supposedly carries away more contaminants, perhaps because of that. I think we overthink both of these.
What’s the best time to change the oil? About 7.30pm.Then it can drain over night while I drink a beerAndyB
Yesterday, but mostly to get the 7100 Motul out of the system. (Wrong color) Change the oil when warm, and don't start the bike until spring,unless you are riding it enough time to warm the oil up..
Then after you've had a beer or two and slept it off in the morning, you can go out, forget you were in the middle of an oil change, start the bike up to move it outside, and ....Lannis
Whenever I am draining the oil, I put a small note attached by the key, saying “no oil”. Even a dummy like me can read that before I start the machine. The note hasn’t fail me yet.