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Sears Auto Center Service
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07-10-2012, 07:06 PM
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Banned
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Join Date: May 2012
Vehicles: Ford 2008 XLT 4WD Escape- Ford 2009 XLT 4WD Escape
Location: SW Kansas
Posts: 161
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Re: Sears Auto Center Service
Quote:
Originally Posted by herm
You use the oil soaked rags to start a fire, to burn your leaves, old tires etc.
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that's good  -
if he'd done very many oil changes on different vehicles he'd of found out many don't have oil filters perfectly located so as not to lose a drop
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07-11-2012, 02:06 PM
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Veteran
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Join Date: Oct 2008
Vehicles: 2010 Toyota Prius Touring (2006 HCHII still in the family)
Location: Coquitlam, BC (Greater Vancouver Area)
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Re: Sears Auto Center Service
If I'm "he", I've been changing oil since '81. Filters mounting on a vertical face and near the bottom seem most practical.
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07-11-2012, 05:29 PM
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Legend In His Mind
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Join Date: Apr 2011
Vehicles: 2008 Honda Civic LX auto
Location: near Chicago IL
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Re: Sears Auto Center Service
Quote:
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If I'm "he", I've been changing oil since '81. Filters mounting on a vertical face and near the bottom seem most practical.
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That's how it was on my 89 and two 97 Civics. Everything would drip nicely into the same pan ; from the oil pan drain hole and the back of the engine where the oil filter lived. Only drawback ? It was a SNUG fit to get my more-slender-than-average forearm to reach back under the FI manifold and grip the filter. Dunno how larger folks could even do it the same way.
On my 2008 Civic , I need to jack up one corner of the front end a bit , not even enough to lift a wheel off the ground, but just enough to let me reach under with my socket-type oil filter wrench. Everything drains beautifully. This reminds me......... my Maintenance Minder is telling 5% oil life. Better change oil this weekend.
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Edwin
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07-11-2012, 07:01 PM
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Re: Sears Auto Center Service
Honda positioned them very often that way: on vert. face and near bottom. And I'd always think how much better it would be if they were coming off the bottom. Figured they would unscrew and be like a cup of liquid.
Well that's true, except it's an overflowing cup. At least in my experience. (Must have been our HCHII with that underslung configuration) As soon as the gasket has a bit of gap, the oil starts coming out (even if you've drained the pan already), and you very quickly have oil dripping off your elbow (if you're lucky), or heading for your armpit.
Anyway, I started using oil filter pliers in that case: break it loose with a oil filter socket, then switch to the pliers during deluge.
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07-11-2012, 07:42 PM
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Custom User Title
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Join Date: Nov 2011
Vehicles: 07 Silverado, 12 Express Cargo
Location: Albion, MI
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Re: Sears Auto Center Service
I kinda like the top filter mount. I've put on a fumoto valve, so its a real easy no tools under the car thing. Except the scion has a belly pan cover to remove to find the filter.
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James -
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07-11-2012, 07:57 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Vehicles: 1981 Mazda GLC M5; 1975 Windsor Pro (bike); 1984 Trek 620; 1961 Schwinn Corvette
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Re: Sears Auto Center Service
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mendel Leisk
Filters mounting on a vertical face and near the bottom seem most practical.
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That's right. I would add that they also need to reachable from above, so you don't end up under the car with hot oil trickling down your arm. I can change oil and filter without getting under my car at all, except to position the drain pan. Same with my brother's old F-100 I-6.
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07-11-2012, 08:30 PM
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Join Date: May 2012
Vehicles: 2011 Hyundai Accent
Location: Maine
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Re: Sears Auto Center Service
I had no want for a particular oil filter position until I ran over an armadillo in a Dodge Caravan. The armadillo crushed the oil filter, but I'm lucky that it didn't cause a leak.
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07-11-2012, 10:33 PM
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Vehicles: 2012 MINI Cooper
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Re: Sears Auto Center Service
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mendel Leisk
... I'd always think how much better it would be if they were coming off the bottom. Figured they would unscrew and be like a cup of liquid.
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My 914 (my little FSP) is very like that; the back-flow valve in the filter (which is vertically mounted near the bottom of the engine) keeps most of the oil in the filter. Not quite all, of course, but very little oil comes out unless you tilt the filter to the side.
-soD
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07-12-2012, 05:13 AM
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Re: Sears Auto Center Service
Quote:
Originally Posted by some_other_dave
My 914 (my little FSP) is very like that; the back-flow valve in the filter (which is vertically mounted near the bottom of the engine) keeps most of the oil in the filter.
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Thats a good point and one of the reasons I use quality oil filters.. WIX all the way.
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