I bought a 54 Chevy a few weeks ago that had been sitting for a while. I just got it running tonight and wanted to change the oil again. I drained the oil but the canister is still full. The first time I just kinda soaked it up with some rags then cleaned it out. I can't fully understand how it works, shouldn't the oil drain back down the line on the bottom of the canister. I don't want to leave a quart of old oil every time I change it, what am I missing here? Thanks, Jim
62 chevy pick up with a 235 JUST bought it, and looking to change the oil this weekend, I am deffinently interested in a good answer lol
I use a turkey baster. It's a bypass oil filter. There is a 1/16" hole about 1" from the top of the center tube. That small orifice meters the oil flowing back into the crankcase, so the oil pressure doesn't drop.
Thanks, I knew it wasn't a full flow filter, just wasn't sure exactly how it worked. I didn't see the hole at the top but knew it had to be something like that. Thanks for the replies!
Take the cannister off drill a 3/8 hole in the bottom. Weld or braze a fine thread nut to the cannister over the hole. Now it will have a drain plug. OldWolf
I never had that much oil left in mine. I pulled the filter and had only a few ounces at best left in the cannister. Are you sure oil is getting to/from your filter? Are your hoses clogged?
Ford bypass filters have a pipe plug to drain...sure you aren't overlooking one?? Material is thick enough that you could if necessary just drill a hole at the base and thread for a 1/8 or 1/4 pipe plug.
Got a pump today at Napa, looks just like a grease gun with a hose on the end, worked great. The reason there was so much oil was I didn't have a filter in there the second time I changed the oil, I guess it would be a lot less otherwise, forgot to mention that. Mine doesn't have a drain on it, but thanks for the tip on adding one, I think I'll do that in the future. By the way, this thing sat for 15 on more years, had at least 2 gallons of water in the oil (2 piece hood, no molding, vent slits in top of valve cover) fired right up and runs like a champ now! Thanks fellas, Jim
Bruce: Ford had a better idea...by having that drain plug. Chevrolet...not so smart. I think that I have seen only a couple of the add-on filters used on that generation of inline six that had any sort of drain plug. The vast majority came without. All of the Ford Flatties that I have seen have them. Again, a better idea except when the toilet paper roll disintegrated and plugged up that little orifice. I put a tee in the line coming out the bottom of the filter. That was a little easier than welding on a bung with a plug. Tom