Oven liner.Any recommendations for something to put underneath a car and prevent spills beyond the oil pan?
I typically do my oil changes and there's always a small spill on the garage floor, so just looking to put something underneath the pan?
Oven liner.Any recommendations for something to put underneath a car and prevent spills beyond the oil pan?
I typically do my oil changes and there's always a small spill on the garage floor, so just looking to put something underneath the pan?
Any recommendations for something to put underneath a car and prevent spills beyond the oil pan?
I typically do my oil changes and there's always a small spill on the garage floor, so just looking to put something underneath the pan?
Simple and cheap, I love it.Oven liner.
General PDP Template
www.canadiantire.ca
Thanks! Never considered that one.I use cut-up cardboard boxes to line the floor. If you want to get fancy, you can get an oil absorbing mat that you can wash and reuse. If you want to get REALLY fancy, get a Stahlbus oil drain valve (I use one on my SXV's oil tank as well as my MDX since the oil drain doesn't protrude below the oil pan).
The stahlbus® oil drain valve
www.stahlbus.com
If I care, I just use a flattened cardboard box. Throw it out after the job. Normally I don't care that much and use some oil absorber and then sweep it up.Any recommendations for something to put underneath a car and prevent spills beyond the oil pan?
I typically do my oil changes and there's always a small spill on the garage floor, so just looking to put something underneath the pan?
I use oil mat like this https://www.amazon.ca/Armor-All-AAO...&keywords=oil+spill+mat&qid=1680101412&sr=8-3Simple and cheap, I love it.
Thanks! Never considered that one.
I'm planning on doing an oil change on the Volt as the computer says it needs it.
Then the bike.
Then the van.
I like clear plastic rectangles you buy for under office chairs. They’re $20ish dollars and pretty much invisible so you can just leave them there all the time.Any recommendations for something to put underneath a car and prevent spills beyond the oil pan?
I typically do my oil changes and there's always a small spill on the garage floor, so just looking to put something underneath the pan?
Owners could pool their money and buy the course. That never happens. They want to ***** about what others do with their property but aren't willing to put up the money to change the path.I have a place in a golf course community, the course owners are trying to develop the fairway directly across the street.
The neighbors backing onto that fairway are fighting like badgers.
Developers will win.
I keep a cheap box of kitty litter in the garage. It's great for soaking up little spills.Any recommendations for something to put underneath a car and prevent spills beyond the oil pan?
I typically do my oil changes and there's always a small spill on the garage floor, so just looking to put something underneath the pan?
Developer owns the course, they did offer to sell the land to homeowners, way too expensive. $1.2m/resident.Owners could pool their money and buy the course. That never happens. They want to ***** about what others do with their property but aren't willing to put up the money to change the path.
I broke a lever last year. It's easy enough to get the whole lever off, but the replacement doesn't have the lowwr black bit. It's held in by the cylindrical piece, but I'm not sure how to get that cylinder out. It's a really tight fit. Any ideas?
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Shouldn't be a really tight fit, it's a hardened spanner bushing, it should push out with light pressure. Steel can corrode to aluminum, so a squirt of penetrating oil and a light tap should free it up.I broke a lever last year. It's easy enough to get the whole lever off, but the replacement doesn't have the lowwr black bit. It's held in by the cylindrical piece, but I'm not sure how to get that cylinder out. It's a really tight fit. Any ideas?
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My partner always asks why Canadians park in their drive ways...had to explain the garage was for toys and seasonable stuff like snow shovels etc....gardening stuff, snow tires....etc etc and of course motorcycles.I'm finding this out. Part of it is a Canadian thing...different toys for each season.It doesn't matter how much space you have... It'll fill up eventually

A new one came with the new lever and it doesn't push right in. I was planning on using a vice to squeeze it in.Shouldn't be a really tight fit, it's a hardened spanner bushing, it should push out with light pressure. Steel can corrode to aluminum, so a squirt of penetrating oil and a light tap should free it up.
When you swap it over, clean it up and lightly grease both sides of the bushing before refitting.
