Oil extractor

Jampy00

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Long overdue oil change required for my push mower.
Hate tipping it to get oil out, anyone use an oil extractor to do this.
See many listings on Amazon for battery and manual units.
Was considering getting one, maybe use it on other equipment?
 
My Honda is 10+ yrs old, and once a year it gets turned over to drain the oil.
It was a painful method at first, but I'm used to it now.
Plus side is, I know there's nothing left inside when I'm done.
 
I own two , small one , big one . Both are a vacuum type , off brand CTC units . The oil is in the extractor tank not all over everything which works for me . It does take about 10 mins to suck out a liter so plan accordingly.


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Long overdue oil change required for my push mower.
Hate tipping it to get oil out, anyone use an oil extractor to do this.
See many listings on Amazon for battery and manual units.
Was considering getting one, maybe use it on other equipment?

I use an extractor for almost all oil changes. They are amazing. The major time factor is whether you have a straight shot to an oil pocket so it can suck straight oil or if it sucks some oil and some air. Oil change on my car can be done in 10 minutes. My wife's normally takes much longer as it's hard to suck oil without getting air.

You have a choice of manual pump or compressed air powered pump. I went with hand pump so I can easily use it anywhere. I'm sure compressed air powered would get things done faster when you are sucking air. Mine also allows you to pressure to move fluid out of the reservoir. Good for transferring waste to containers. You could use that for difficult fluid changes (like diffs or trans that fill from under the car) but I use separate systems for those as I don't want oil contamination in trans fluid.
 
Yes, I have one called Topsider. It's metal and well made. Had it about 10yrs now and use it many times a year from lawnmowers, snowmobiles (chaincases) to cars to snowblower and generator. Saves me a ton of time and mess.
 
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I use an extractor for almost all oil changes. They are amazing. The major time factor is whether you have a straight shot to an oil pocket so it can suck straight oil or if it sucks some oil and some air. Oil change on my car can be done in 10 minutes. My wife's normally takes much longer as it's hard to suck oil without getting air.

You have a choice of manual pump or compressed air powered pump. I went with hand pump so I can easily use it anywhere. I'm sure compressed air powered would get things done faster when you are sucking air. Mine also allows you to pressure to move fluid out of the reservoir. Good for transferring waste to containers. You could use that for difficult fluid changes (like diffs or trans that fill from under the car) but I use separate systems for those as I don't want oil contamination in trans fluid.
my model is the same, i believe you can also attach an air line/compressor to it.
 
my model is the same, i believe you can also attach an air line/compressor to it.
I have the mv7201. No compressed air connection. Mv7300 is compressed air but no manual pump. Conceivably, with a little plumbing work and valves, I could convert the 7201 to work with air or muscle.
 
You guys change the oil in your lawnmowers??

Hell I think I need to also then. Haven’t done it in 4 years.
I'm pushing way more than that. I beat the thing and the oil is still on level and relatively clear. I was amazed.
 
I have a small unit,
You are welcome to borrow it.
Something like the one below.

I will be in Georgetown tomorrow night.
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Hell I think I need to also then. Haven’t done it in 4 years.

Before I switched to an electric mower about five years ago the mower I used hadn’t had its oil changed in over 15 years lol. It’s not that I didn’t mean to at points, it was just kind of one of those things that never ended up happening

The deck started to get janky in spots and the wheels and bushings all needed to be replaced before the engine ever showed any signs of problems lol. Still ran great, burned no oil at all. Eventually the recoil let go and it all unwound and made a heck of a mess, and with all of its other issues it just didn’t make any sense to try to salvage the engine onto a new lawnmower at that point even though it still ran great. It went to the curb for the scrappers running otherwise perfectly fine just the day before.

I don’t treat any of my other vehicles or toys this way FWIW, but a push mower wasn’t high on my list of maintenance items I guess.
 
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