Been using that method for decades. I have shag carpet in my garage so it’s impossible to find small bits if dropped.I place a towel under mine, so if and when I drop one…it just lands on the towel.
Yes, I had seen that, too. For me, the hardest part of the entire installation were those stupid push pins in the valve cover, with the big wiring harness in the way. No way I am going to deal with them every time I want to get the oil out. I read that some take the cover off each time and just wipe it clean, and others use a syringe to syphon out. I went with the syringe, but I think you need to get a handle on the amount of oil collected over a period of time. If you want to empty frequently, the syringe may not work; not often enough and just wiping it clean will be a mess.I swear I saw a ford how to video that showed them undoing the pins and dumping the whole thing. I’ll see if I can find it for fun.
Been there, done that.I dropped one of those little top cover bolts after draining mine. Heart it clink twice.
Nothing under the car
Not visible from the top
Removed the coolant tank, still can't find it.
Dragged a magnet around the belly pan, nothing
Removed the belly pan, nothing.
Lots more searching.
Finally found the bugger had landed inside the AC fan shroud.
- 30 min oil change turned into a 1.5 hour affair.
Yes, that was my same concept. I was not a fan of having to pull that wiring harness. it's already snug enough!Yes, I had seen that, too. For me, the hardest part of the entire installation were those stupid push pins in the valve cover, with the big wiring harness in the way. No way I am going to deal with them every time I want to get the oil out. I read that some take the cover off each time and just wipe it clean, and others use a syringe to syphon out. I went with the syringe, but I think you need to get a handle on the amount of oil collected over a period of time. If you want to empty frequently, the syringe may not work; not often enough and just wiping it clean will be a mess.
At the risk of asking a really dumb question, do you mind describing this in a little more detail? Just a shop towel under the actual air-oil separator?I place a towel under mine, so if and when I drop one…it just lands on the towel.
You mean you hope to find a diamond!There's now a torx bit down there somewhere. I think a winter project will be to drop the bottom covers and go on a scavenger hunt. Heck, I may find the Hope diamond in there.
I dropped an Allen key and it went straight down to the bottom. I must have screamed and cursed for 20 min straight. I finally got it out after a few hours hunting for it with a magnet and a camera but next time I'm going to create and or buy something to go under where I work as I CANNOT have that happen again. Felt like such an idiot.Lol, you haven't freaked out yet until you drop the screw to the bottom of the pan... that being said I forget I have yet to make my ace hardware visit for extra bolts on hand. Thankfully, my magnetic tool helped get that bolt out of the bottom but man.... that was pure luck that day.
If you have a syringe already, why bother with even removing the bolts and top? Just disconnect the lower hose, and with a little extension hose on the syringe, insert into seperator and syphon. Granted, you won't get every last drop of oil, but you will get 99%.I remove the bolts and the top, then use a syringe to remove the oil, have a magnetic pan that the bolts go in while I have the top portion off.
Try dropping it in the hull of a jet ski. Then spending an hour with a magnet trying to fish for it.Try dropping something into the engine bay of a 911……been there and cursed that….
Pics senorTo drain, I just put a small container underneath and remove the screw