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We used to install those in trucks when I worked in oil. We also installed them in the engines running the cement pumps. It made it so MUCH easier to just hook up the hose to the side of the trailer instead of fiddling around to change the oil. With two diesels side by side there wasn’t a lot of free space to work.
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Quoted: Not having hot oil splash all over your hand when you remove the drain plug, and instead having 100% of the old oil drain directly into the container you want it in. You also don't drop the drain plug into the container you're draining into or miss the waste oil container with a stream of waste oil. If you have some other way not to spill a single drop, please let us know. View Quote K. So I usually save a large appliances box and cut them into two. I set this on the ground underneath the vehicle where I will be working. I use a drain pan that caps off the top and spout portion, doesn't leak. I set that on the cardboard in a position that will capture the oil as it flows out the drain. After that difficult task is complete, I throw on some nitrile gloves, grab my ratchet or impact, an extension and socket, I also grab a shop rag. I zip the plug off, quickly move it out of the stream and grab the plug. wipe extension, socket and plug with shop towel, then my hands if necessary. If I lose the bolt in the drain pan I grab my telescoping magnet and retrieve it. I let drain and then use shop towel to clean around drain hole, torque the drain plug to spec. Use shop towel to clean around the plug head. Shift drain pan under filter. Use shop rag and tool of your choice, up to a screw driver. Loosen filter, with other hand place shop rag underneath to capture any potential spill. Set old filter up on pan to drain, clean around the filter housing with rag. coat gasket of new oil filter, add in a bit of oil and torque back down. Fill vehicle with oil. Use shop towel to clean the dipstick when checking level. Everything good. I tighten up the drain pan, use same shop towel from beginning and clean up any residue on drain pan and take it to auto store to get rid of waste oil. Discard shop towel and nitrile gloves. profit |
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Just changed the oil in my tacoma using a fumoto valve. Much easier and cleaner than the regular drain plug.
Eta: it's tucked well up above the skid plate, so I'm not concerned about it getting hit. |
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Quoted: I've been using synthetic oil and 10k change intervals since the mid 90's. Is this a Ford 5.4 or Ecoburst problem or something? I've never had a timing chain stretch to the point of failure. View Quote I work at a Honda k24s are horrible for it. We An r18 civic engine every now and then. Have seen it on just about every Dohc engine out there but the volume of Honda I work on limits the exposure. |
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Quoted: There would be far easier ways than draining your oil,not to mention almost every vehicle will run for a shockingly lengthy time with just residual oil. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Doesn't have to be unintentional. Could be opened on purpose by Antifa-type scum trying to disable vehicles. There would be far easier ways than draining your oil,not to mention almost every vehicle will run for a shockingly lengthy time with just residual oil. Still no reason to add additional weak points. Running an engine on just residual oil is never a good thing. |
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I have had a Fumoto valve on all my vehicles for about 10 years. Worth it.
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Quoted: ya me too not that complicated to remove a bolt for drain seems like an answer seeking a question View Quote On taller vehicles, you can drain directly into a tall jug without jacking up the vehicle. No stupid drain pain to deal with. Jug goes directly to the disposal location. An oil plug would complicate this process. If you're using an oil drain pan, the plug isn't that big a deal. |
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A lot of valvers seem really worried about getting drops of icky oil on their husband's carport.
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Quoted: You know, the plugs are never a problem but whoever changed the oil on my two vehicles before I changed it the last time put the filters on with an impact gun. Dented and crushed the hell out them trying to get both filters off. View Quote The only time I've ever had a problem getting an oil filter off, it was one I didn't put on. |
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Quoted: Quoted: I can't ever seem to wrap my head around the point of this. Never have myself either. I learned the point yesterday. After releasing the oil plug, the oil shot out and splashed tiny droplets all around. I was using a giant oil catch, but it still splattered all around. Almost got in my eyes. Combination of very thin oil, and the height of the truck. I’ll be getting a Fumoto with a plastic tube attached. If I plug the end of it when I’m done, that will also function as a fail safe in case the valve goes bad. Speaking of which; can anyone recommend which valve is best for a 2019 F150 3.5 EB? |
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Quoted: How often are you changing your oil? With full synthetic there no reason you can't go at least 6,000 miles. My Grandfather was a chemist at BP and even on conventional oils he would follow the service routine in the owner's manual. Albeit he wasn't going by the severe schedule. He said oil doesn't break down. That's just his opinion, though. I do believe the 3,000 mile interchange is a profit making scheme, though, especially with modern oils! View Quote Grampaw the Chemist wasn’t dealing with modern Turbocharged engines. You need to edumacate yourself. It is (unfortunately) a whole different world nowadays. Every engine is different. My Camry (normally aspirated) goes 10,000 miles and the oil is still pretty clean. My 2.0 turbocharged VW is filthy after 3000. My Ecoboost is somewhere in between, but I’m going with 5000 mile changes. Oil is cheap compared to valve problems. |
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Quoted: Quoted: I can't ever seem to wrap my head around the point of this. Never have myself either. Same here. I just use the OEM drain plug. I work at a dealer and over 20 years have only seen one valve and it drains too slow. |
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View Quote Nope. Not at all. I have a much fancier air powered one. It never gets used, because crawling under is just that much easier. |
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Quoted: Lol right. Chain wear wasn’t part of an oil standard until May 1 of this year. https://www.api.org/products-and-services/engine-oil/eolcs-categories-and-classifications/latest-oil-categories View Quote wait, because there was no standardized test for timing chain wear, everyone's timing chain was wearing? ps at one point i had *almost* 500K miles in my driveway -- on just two cars. 10K OCI, did them all myself. https://www.ar15.com/forums/general/_ARCHIVED_THREAD____so_long_and_happy_trails____238K_miles_bmw_3_series____original_owner__no_complaints/134-1770627/ that, and i sold my Tacoma recently with 280K on it. i also think a lot of people ignore a lot of factors when it comes to OCI. - oil type (dino, semi, full syn) - driving profile (city, highway, etc) - environmental profile (temperature extremes, cold start, hot idle, etc) - engine oil sump capacity (bmw e46 above has a small 2.5L engine and a 7.5qt oil sump) - etc ar-jedi |
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Stepping out bolts? Magnets to stick tools to your car?
WTF? Some of you guys I swear to god... |
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Quoted: Quoted: Had a fumoto on my Xterra, was always a little worried that it stuck down through the skid plate and was always in the back of my mind on the trail It was still above the bottom of the skid, just was there if something poked into the hole. I was going to make a cover plate but never got around to it and it never was an issue over many trail miles. I needed it because otherwise when you pull the drain plug half went on top of the skid and half ran all over everywhere else |
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Fumoto.
A spring hose clamp of the right size can be tightened so one of its thinner legs prevent unintentional discharge (ie, a secondary lock). |
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Over many decades of changing oil, I've never once had a problem where I had to go looking for that kind of a solution.
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Quoted: Stepping out bolts? Magnets to stick tools to your car? WTF? Some of you guys I swear to god... View Quote Your reading comprehension is substandard. Several members related that guys at the local Grease Monkey shop stripped out bolts with airguns. That- is a common occurrence. No need to swear to God, or any other supernatural deity. The magnet guy? Well he seems pretty proud of his invention. Maybe he’s forgetful and it’s reassuring to always know where the proper wrench is. In the ancient old days, people used to stick keys like that. |
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I have fumotos on both my car and truck. Still have to jack up the car, as it is lowered, but only one side and it aids in draining.
My truck, I stick a 5 gallon bucket under it and wait 15 minutes for it to drain.... super easy, but time consuming. |
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Quoted: This is why you can't take GD seriously in oil, filter, or tire threads. Too many ignorant and uninformed opinions. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Amazed at all the opposition to these in this thread This is why you can't take GD seriously in oil, filter, or tire threads. Too many ignorant and uninformed opinions. On the other hand, GD was right on the money with using newspaper and windex to clean the inside of the windshield. So GD knowledge is at least on par with bums standing at intersections. |
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Quoted: On the other hand, GD was right on the money with using newspaper and windex to clean the inside of the windshield. So GD knowledge is at least on par with bums standing at intersections. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Amazed at all the opposition to these in this thread This is why you can't take GD seriously in oil, filter, or tire threads. Too many ignorant and uninformed opinions. On the other hand, GD was right on the money with using newspaper and windex to clean the inside of the windshield. So GD knowledge is at least on par with bums standing at intersections. To be fair, that's not a secret. It's been around for 30+ years. |
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Quoted: To be fair, that's not a secret. It's been around for 30+ years. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Amazed at all the opposition to these in this thread This is why you can't take GD seriously in oil, filter, or tire threads. Too many ignorant and uninformed opinions. On the other hand, GD was right on the money with using newspaper and windex to clean the inside of the windshield. So GD knowledge is at least on par with bums standing at intersections. To be fair, that's not a secret. It's been around for 30+ years. Yeah, but it sounded stupid to me, so I didn't try it until yesterday. |
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Quoted: Yeah, but it sounded stupid to me, so I didn't try it until yesterday. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Amazed at all the opposition to these in this thread This is why you can't take GD seriously in oil, filter, or tire threads. Too many ignorant and uninformed opinions. On the other hand, GD was right on the money with using newspaper and windex to clean the inside of the windshield. So GD knowledge is at least on par with bums standing at intersections. To be fair, that's not a secret. It's been around for 30+ years. Yeah, but it sounded stupid to me, so I didn't try it until yesterday. I dun belie it |
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I have a Sure Drain unit on my 2001 Jeep Grand Cherokee. Works great.
Sure Drain Fast Access Oil Change Drain Plug System |
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I run the fumoto on my F250, going places most posters will never take their Prius. Having it "accidentally open" or get sheared off is pretty much about as likely as aliens coming to abduct you.
Dont get me wrong. I wouldnt run one on a dedicated rock crawler, but even normal offroad use you are fine. And Jesus it makes changes easy as can be. Flip a switch and it drains. Who doesnt want that? I hate the mess trying to get a drain plug off. No thanks. |
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Quoted: I can't ever seem to wrap my head around the point of this. View Quote As a diesel (semi) mechanic I can tell you they are nice to have. Some of our trucks dont have them and their oil drain bolts seem to be damn near welded to the pan so far that a battery powered (sometimes even air powered) ugdug won't break them loose. It's just a convenience thing. Car drain bolts, not as much of an issue torque wise. |
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1. they're slow as fuck.
2. its a huge brass protusion from your oil pan. asking for trouble |
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whats hilarious is how many retards wear being able to change your oil as some sort of badge of honor. as in look at me i am an expert car workeroner
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Quoted: Just what I want, a valve that would have a chance of opening unintentionally. Do the normal thing, get your husband to change the oil. View Quote Had this happen to me. Ran over some sage brush and opened the valve. Luckily someone on the ground noticed it fairly quick. (Dunno what brand or if it was some hack mechanics doing, but it sure as hell opened up) |
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Quoted: Had this happen to me. Ran over some sage brush and opened the valve. Luckily someone on the ground noticed it fairly quick. (Dunno what brand or if it was some hack mechanics doing, but it sure as hell opened up) View Quote lol. its literally open or closed blame your fucking rube goldberg contraption on some hack mechanic. ok.... |
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I have a fumoto on my F150. Bigger pain is dealing with the filter that has an oil maze on the skid plate.
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Quoted: I have a Sure Drain unit on my 2001 Jeep Grand Cherokee. Works great. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNRv8bD9cBo View Quote Ordered 2 Valvomax. |
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I use Fumoto valves on the Carrier and Thermoking reefer units on our trucks. The original setup is an NPT cap on a short rubber ‘whip’ hose. Makes a big mess. Kinda sketched out by the prospect of using a quick-release valve in close proximity to the ground, but I completely understand why someone would want to do so.
Quoted: i installed a SureDrain on my bought-new Tacoma 3.4L V6 at the very first oil change, and sold the truck at 280K miles. the SureDrain has roughly the same profile as the OEM drain plug -- it's pretty low profile. the mating "drain hose" has a mechanical feature on the end which pushes a spring-loaded ball off of it's seal. it never leaked a drop. the guy who bought it from me a year ago still has it on. it made DIY oil changes a snap. i did 10K OCI using M1 5W-30. no internal engine issues. in fact, now that i think about it, i only ever replaced the serpentine belt and the water pump. everything else under the hood -- with the exception of the battery -- was as-delivered in 2001. View Quote You put 280k miles on the original timing belt? ETA nevermind; I’m sure the water pump service included a new belt. |
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Been changing oil on vehicles since I was 5 thanks to my Grandpa.56 now, and still do it the same way... it ain't that hard. Why add an extra part that will sooner than later fail?
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Quoted: I use Fumoto valves on the Carrier and Thermoking reefer units on our trucks. The original setup is an NPT cap on a short rubber ‘whip’ hose. Makes a big mess. Kinda sketched out by the prospect of using a quick-release valve in close proximity to the ground, but I completely understand why someone would want to do so. You put 280k miles on the original timing belt? ETA nevermind; I’m sure the water pump service included a new belt. View Quote I've serviced a few Hondas and Toyotas that came close. (230k ish) |
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Get someone to teach you how to operate a socket and ratchet. Wear gloves so you don't mess up your manicure.
People who work on shit for a living are laughing now. |
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