|
11-01-2013 | #1 |
Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: Colorado Springs, CO
Posts: 160
|
Oil Change
I know this has been covered ad nauseum, but after searching and doing a ton of reading, I've got more questions than answers. After doing 99% of my own car work for my adult life, I never, ever thought I'd be asking questions about an oil change, but here we are.
I'm pretty up and up about what oil and filter to use. I plan to use a Mityvac to extract the oil. LT5 guys give some contradictory information though. First, guys seem to agree that the oil should be warm before extracting, which on a normal motor, I agree since it drains faster. This requires running the car. They also agree that quite a bit of oil stays in the motor for extended periods of time and the motor needs to sit for hours before all of the oil is in the pan. By the time the oil drains down to the pan, it will have cooled. I could leave it up on jack stands overnight draining it out of the drain plug, but I have a small 2 car garage and I'm not about to leave my '69 outside overnight, so that's not really a viable option due to space. Besides that, I can't imagine for the life of me that when these cars were new, Chevrolet gave new Z owners a loaner car since a simple oil change take's overnight to accomplish. So, what's the consensus here? Run the car to heat the oil up and leave a quart+ in the motor (along with the 1.5q in the cooler that everyone's ok with) or pump the cold oil out of the pan after the car's been sitting? I'm not even sure how the mityvac is going to work with cold oil, since I've always done it the old fashioned way and I've heard mixed about whether it's got the guts to pull cold oil. It seems the goal is to get 9 to 9.5 quarts out of the thing including what's in the filter. Of course, checking the level is done after the motor's been sitting several hours or more. So, guys using Mityvac's or similar, do you run the car to heat up and thin the oil first, or do you pump it when it's cold, thick, and mostly in the pan? Thanks, guys. Chris Last edited by csavaglio; 11-01-2013 at 07:23 AM. |
11-01-2013 | #2 |
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: South Dakota/California
Posts: 3,797
|
Engine Oil Change
For Engine Oil Change, Let it sit overnight....drain oil in morning including filter change without starting engine. Sitting overnight should make oil filter change easy with no spilled oil (Drain....not Extract). Draining is better than extracting for the simple reason any unreasonable contaminants sit in the bottom of the oil pan where extraction is impossible....also.....water is heavier than oil.
When the oil draining starts to drip vice run you are done See LT5/ZR-1 Fluids Add about 9 quarts of AMSOIL 10W-40 25% of the oil you do not get this time you will get 75% of that next time......which is just fine. For those that have not done so......change ALL fluids when you get the ZR-1 (Engine, Transmission, Differential.....extracting Brake/Clutch Fluid) and then change Oil as well as Transmisison fluid on schedule (see Notes in LT5/ZR-1 Fluids). Wipe clean Brake Fluid reservoirs and Clutch Fluid reservoir under ECM (replace with Dot 4).
__________________
Left Clickable links -Solutions- LT5 Modifications/Rebuild Tricks Low Mileage ZR-1 Restoration 1990 Corvette (L98) Modifications LT5 Eliminated Systems LT5 Added Systems LT5/ZR-1 Fluids 1995 LT5 SPECIFIC TOP END REBUILD TRICKS Last edited by Dynomite; 11-01-2013 at 08:38 AM. |
11-01-2013 | #3 |
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Dunbarton NH
Posts: 7,478
|
Re: Oil Change
I agree, so much oil gets left in the engine via what's stuck in the motor and whats in the cooler and lines, are we really worried about those last couple drops??? I do change my oil hot, my thought process is that more of the dirt is in suspention(sp) and flows out easier. Not sitting like sludge on the bottom of the pan.
|
11-01-2013 | #4 | |
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: South Dakota/California
Posts: 3,797
|
Re: Oil Change
Quote:
If it can be recirculated it can be drained by gravity without recirculation Last edited by Dynomite; 11-01-2013 at 09:32 AM. |
|
11-01-2013 | #5 |
Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: Colorado Springs, CO
Posts: 160
|
Re: Oil Change
I cancelled the order for the extractor thing.
I figure I'll crawl under, pull the plug, and go to bed....I'm finishing up my 12 hour mid shift in about 45 minutes. I should be asleep for 3 or 4 hours and that should give plenty of time for everything to drain out that's going to. After I get up, I'll go pick up the oil and hopefully the filters I ordered will show up by the time I'm filling it back up. I want to flush out and bleed the clutch hydraulics too while I'm at it. I already did the trans fluid. I make a habit out of changing everything when I get a car, but I only have about 24 hours off after this set. Chris Last edited by csavaglio; 11-01-2013 at 09:00 AM. |
11-01-2013 | #6 |
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Scottsdale, AZ
Posts: 2,452
|
Re: Oil Change
Mighty Vac is the way to go
|
11-01-2013 | #7 |
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: pittsburgh
Posts: 4,632
|
Re: Oil Change
i've never let my oil drain for more the 45 minutes, I wait till it starts to drip out vs flow out on all cars, and I drain ~10 quarts of oil.
__________________
It's not the car, it's the people - Doug Johnson 90 r/r "KEYS ON" nick named "T.L.B" |
11-01-2013 | #8 |
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: San Marcos CA
Posts: 1,802
|
Re: Oil Change
Oh man- it's really just another engine. If you change the oil on a reasonable interval, a little bit of old oil in the cooler won't matter.
Drain for 10 minutes- having sat for a couple of hours so the filter doesn't make a mess on removal. I go 5 qts Mobil1 with 4 qts Z-rod Amsoil with the zddp additive. No need for full strength, I'm attempting to duplicate early 90's additive content. This is the only exotic part of my oil change. If you want to flush the engine and lines out cheaply, get some walmart 10w-30 and run it for 5 miles and then drain it all out. |
11-01-2013 | #9 |
Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: Colorado Springs, CO
Posts: 160
|
Re: Oil Change
Yeah, I just read all the stories about running the motor and only getting 6 quarts out. I had left the car sitting a few days, so when I got home from work this morning, I opened the drain screw and went to bed. I finished it up after I got up, got oil and the filters came in the mail.
I waited a few hours, added oil, then drove it around the block. I'll check it in the morning before work tomorrow. I flushed the clutch hydraulics too. It needed it bad. I'd be surprised if it had ever been done before. It does shift much better now....3rd gear would resist a little bit before, but seems a lot better after the clutch stuff and tranny fluid. Thanks for the help guys. Hopefully it's not over filled when I check it in the morning. Chris |
11-01-2013 | #10 |
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 1,890
|
Re: Oil Change
You didn't mention the quarts used for the fill. How many did you use for the fill?
|
|
|