"Widely regarded" and "commonly acknowledged" and so on are not equal to "it has been proven" :-PBailes1992 wrote: Diesels are 12,000miles/12months. It's widely regarded that 6,000miles/6months is ideal for diesel engines. Even haynes reccomend it!
Either way, I'll never trust Haynes completely. "Installation is the reverse of removal", indeed! They're good for looking up bits of information and for general procedures, but I prefer to trust the manufacturer for anything critical. The difference in the level of detail between Haynes and a factory service manual is enormous, usually Haynes tries to cover far too many models and variants in a single book and lose out on critical details, some times they lose out on details while still not covering enough models! For instance, the Haynes manual for the D9 406 doesn't even cover the 2.0 HPI, the 2.2 petrol or the 3.0 petrol.
Don't get me wrong, it doesn't hurt to change the oil more often. But considering the fact that there are 2.2 petrol 406s on the road with over 400,000km on the standard Peugeot maintenance and oil change schedule, I'm inclined to place my trust in the people who designed and built my car.
Modern synthetic oil is some seriously impressive stuff and for just about anything on the road these days, a yearly oil+filter change with decent fully-synthetic oil is perfectly fine, unless you do nothing but "severe duty", specifically short trips, very cold weather, very dusty conditions or very high yearly mileage. I'm a bit wary of super-extended oil change intervals as well, but a yearly change is not an extended interval at all, it's a shorter interval than most engines were designed for, with the average mileage that people do.