Why Do Motorcycles Consume Engine Oil? The Truth Behind “Oil Kam Ho Raha Hai” in Pakistan
In Pakistan, one of the most common complaints among motorcycle owners is:
“Bike engine oil kha rahi hai.”
Many riders assume oil consumption means worn piston rings or a weak engine. Surprisingly, in most cases, oil consumption is normal and not a mechanical fault—especially in air-cooled commuter motorcycles.
Let’s break the myth.
1. Engine Oil Is Designed to Burn (In Small Amounts)
All internal combustion engines consume a small amount of oil by design. Engine oil lubricates moving parts like piston rings and cylinder walls. A thin oil film always remains inside the combustion chamber, and a tiny portion burns with fuel during every power stroke.
This is not a defect—it’s engineering reality.
In 70cc, 100cc, and 125cc bikes commonly used in Pakistan, acceptable oil consumption can be 50–150 ml per 1,000 km, depending on riding style and oil quality.
2. High RPM Riding Increases Oil Consumption
Pakistani riders often cruise at high RPM for long durations, especially on:
Honda CG125
Yamaha YB125Z
Suzuki GS150
CD70 with heavy load
Small engines rev higher to maintain speed. Higher RPM means:
More heat
Faster oil evaporation
More oil passing piston rings
So if you ride aggressively or keep the bike at high speed for long distances, oil consumption will increase—even in a healthy engine.
3. Air-Cooled Engines Lose Oil Faster
Most motorcycles in Pakistan are air-cooled, not liquid-cooled. Air cooling leads to:
Higher operating temperatures
Faster oil thinning
Increased evaporation
In hot Pakistani summers, engine oil naturally becomes thinner, and some of it burns or vaporizes. This is why oil level drops faster in summer compared to winter.
4. Thin or Low-Quality Oil Is a Major Reason
Another big reason riders complain about oil consumption is wrong oil selection.
Very thin oils (like low-grade 10W oils)
Low-quality or fake oils
Overused oil beyond recommended interval
Thin oil slips past piston rings more easily, especially in older engines. Many engines labeled “oil eater” simply need correct viscosity oil, such as 20W-50 for air-cooled bikes in Pakistan.
5. Engine Braking Also Uses Oil
Frequent engine braking (closing throttle at high speed) creates high vacuum inside the cylinder. This vacuum can pull small amounts of oil past valve seals and rings—again, normal behavior, not damage.
6. When Oil Consumption IS a Problem
Oil consumption becomes abnormal only when:
Blue smoke appears from exhaust
Oil drops drastically (300–500 ml per 1,000 km)
Spark plug fouls frequently
Compression is low
Only then should you suspect worn rings or valve seals.
Final Verdict
In Pakistan, most motorcycles accused of oil consumption are mechanically healthy. High RPM riding, hot weather, air-cooled engines, and wrong oil choice are the real reasons behind falling oil levels.
Instead of blaming the engine, riders should:
Use correct viscosity oil
Check oil level regularly
Avoid extreme oil drain intervals
Understand that some oil consumption is normal
A motorcycle that consumes a little oil but runs strong is often healthier than one running dry.
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