Changing Your Engine Oil? You’re Doing It Wrong
Changing Your Engine Oil? You’re Doing It Wrong, DIY and car review with Scotty Kilmer. How to change engine oil. How to check engine oil the right way. DIY engine oil change. Oil check and oil change fail. Motor oil check and replacement explained. Car advice. DIY car repair with Scotty Kilmer, an auto mechanic for the last 51 years.
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This is the people's automotive channel! The most honest and funniest car channel on KZhead. Never any sponsored content, just the truth about everything! Learn how to fix your car and how it works. Get a chance to show off your own car on Sundays. Or show off your own car mod on Wednesdays. Tool giveaways every Monday to help you with your own car projects. We have a new video every day! I've been an auto mechanic for the past 50 years and I'm here to share my knowledge with you.
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⬇️Scotty’s Top DIY Tools: 1. Bluetooth Scan Tool: amzn.to/2nfvmaD 2. Cheap Scan Tool: amzn.to/2D8Tvae 3. Basic Mechanic Tool Set: amzn.to/2tEr6Ce 4. Professional Socket Set: amzn.to/2Bzmccg 5. Ratcheting Wrench Set: amzn.to/2BQjj8A 6. No Charging Required Car Jump Starter: amzn.to/2CthnUU 7. Battery Pack Car Jump Starter: amzn.to/2nrc6qR ⬇️ Things used in this video: 1. Common Sense 2. 4k Camera: amzn.to/2HkjavH 3. Camera Microphone: amzn.to/2Evn167 4. Camera Tripod: amzn.to/2Jwog8S 5. My computer for editing / uploading: amzn.to/2uUZ3lo 🛠Check out the tools I use and highly recommend ► goo.gl/rwYt2y 🔥Scotty Shirts and Merch ► goo.gl/pTAeca Subscribe and hit the notification bell! ► goo.gl/CFismN Scotty on Social: Facebook ► facebook.com/scottymechanic/ Instagram ► instagram.com/scotty_the_mechanic/ Twitter ► twitter.com/Scottymechanic?lang=en
Liqui moly !
What is the site you use to get specs on your car such as torque specs for bolts etc?
Can't help myself I always change oil at operating temp. Amsoil and purolator for my Ford. Amsoil and mercedes oem for my w205.
Sweet Jesus.
Scotty another tip you failed to mention is to prefill your oil filter with oil I always do that so you don’t start the vehicle dry
Without his hands waiving I wouldn’t understand a word he was saying. Thanks Scotty!
Morse Code. Kilmer sign language.
Must be Italian.
Scotty keep the hands waving a bobble head with your waving hands you'll make millions then will miss you
its for the deaf people
Scotty is multi-tasking, instructions on fixing his car, directing car traffic, giving airplane landing signals, all while talking through his video's. Thank You Scotty!
Me: *exist* Scotty: You’re existing the wrong way.
Isaiah Thomas hahah
Isaiah Thomas HAHAHAHA
Story of my life.
lmao
Yeah I've been useing 10w40 in a car that uses 5w30 (03 Camry vvti) I use it because it just seems to run better ie it burns less
Me: Yea I change my own oil for years Scotty: Hey! Your changing your oil wrong! Me: I better watch this video just in case I'm wrong
LMFAOO oh wow he got me
Second time. I change oil once a year in my car.
Yep! He got me too just that way!🤣🤣🤣The good news is I was doing it right all along👍
Yeah, I missed the part where I'm doing it wrong. Thought he was going to come up with some mind-blowing revelation
😂😂😂😂😂😂 same!!!!!
I worked at a Mobil gas station and repair shop for thirty years and understand everything you say and agree on everything I've watched so far! To bad people are too busy to maintain their vehicle and wait until it's on its last leg, I had customers that would tell me to do whatever I think it needs, and they had a very long lasting vehicle, but I was honest and they trusted me, it's almost impossible to find a good reliable mechanic, keep up the great videos!
Why did I watch this when I know how to change my oil🤔😑
Because like me we just want to make sure 😂
Cuz apparently you’re doing it wrong
Coz you want to see if Scotty knows how
Because... SCOTTY!
@@Voiceovertehe yup 😂🤣
You're a nut man I've changed oil about a hundred and fifty times but I still watched your video because you're so entertaining
I love how this man waves his hands all over the place when he talks
Me too.... about forty some years,,,,,
And soooo loud
@@PeterSmith-ls7ut lol yeah does that guy know hes talking that loud?
Same here, plus, I wanted to make sure I was doing it right all these years, lol.
"You're doing it wrong." -Scotty Proceeds to pour oil into a dirty funnel.
Exactly ! I noticed that filthy funnel too.
Ya but makes sure to change the plug gasket 🤣🤣
Girl
@@akinidavid1653 ?
uses a huge breaker bar for that little bolt too sure he knows left from right but what if someone else isn't paying attention lol
I work at Valvoline, I do this 60 times a day. WHY DID I watch this 😂😂
Because YOu dOInG iT WRonG
For the entertainment!!! 😆
60x/day? wow.
@@shaark92 not surprising at Valvoline
@@austinsharrett9073 I don't doubt one of these service centers with 1/2 dozen/more bays can do 60 oil changes/day ... but I understood the commenter to mean he personally has done 60 in a day. That's a really really long day.
Me: Clicks on video Scotty: “You’re doing it wrong”
Scotty ... Stay tuned next week when I report on why .. Toilet paper companies are a rip off.. Me.....cant wait
What, no impact gun on an oil plug? 🤯 Cross-threading creates a better seal, at least that's what Walmart said after they did it.
This is what happened to my audi s4 took it to the dealer for a $3200 repair. Nice 50 dallar job went to a 3 grand.
Moua Xiong tf you doing on this channel if you take your car to get it’s oil changed? It’s the easiest DIY you can do for your car and if it’s the only thing you ever do to maintain it, it’s plenty to keep it going
@@ryanespinoza7297 I don't have a house I live in a condo with a bunch of friends. Obviously I don't have a fricken garage and a driveway. Not everyone has access to the tools to fix your own car.
@Ford Fanatic audi replaced the whole oil pan.
@@mouaxiong8618 You can change your oil in a parking lot...
Been changing my own oil for 7 years. Best tip I stumbled upon ⬇️ Crack open the oil fill cap before you drain the oil, don't remove it otherwise you'll create the potential for debris to get in. This allows for a fast smooth flow of oil, typically cut my oil drain times in half.
Oh man, I learned a lot. I learned that I am changing my oil perfectly, the right way.
You should clean that funnel before using it. No use putting dirt back into the engine.
Which funnel
@@mimiarumugam2011 the one he used
I noticed the grime on it. NOT on my oil change watch..
seems like the oil didn't touch it
Don't use a funnel. Buy the oil by the quart. No spillage like with the 5 quart jug.
Sorry, I agree with this entire video except for using a 2 foot long breaker bar to tighten a oil drain plug. That's how you end up having to replace the oil pan after 50k miles because the threads are stripped.
I'm surprised he didn't get a torque wrench out for that as well.
Well obviously you don't put full force on it, but if you hold back and can tell roughly how much torque you are applying (as I'm sure a 50+ year mechanic would)... there's nothing wrong with that
Yeah Scotty is mostly full of shyt at this point. Who uses a breaker bar on an oil drain bolt? No amount of being careful with a massive breaker bar is gonna stop you from overtightening that bolt and destroying it. Just use a normal sized ratchet lmaoooo. RIP everyone who follows this advice.
TRUTH!
Interesting
I was always taught to remove the oil cap for better flow and Drop oil while hot and particles are suspended in oil.
Noooooo
I was was told the same thing. Just got to be careful when your doing it and you’ll be okay.
Jacking up the front opposite of the drain Will help also. When Oilwas cheap I would run a quart of new oil through for a rinse
Always get hot oil in your sleeve and or face so your costimer gets scared to do it themselves $$$$
Really there's no reason to remove oil cap. If you think about it, your engine is vented through the air filter assembly and emissions control components. I was taught the same way until I became a mechanic 26 years ago.
Just changed my oil two hours ago ... used ramps, drained oil.... and my Malibu uses a cartridge filter that's easily accessible from the TOP, whether the engine is cool or hot. Scotty is dead on about the double gasket oil filter problem, to go slow putting new oil into the engine, and DOUBLE CHECK to make sure everything is tight and not leaking. You can't believe how many people have screwed up doing these simple steps, and new engines are expensive!
So I was doing it right the whole time !
"He who's name is gold, IS, gold." Pancho Villa back in the day.
You use a breaker bar to break loose and tighten your oil drain bolt? Yeah you've been doing it wrong
@@vviiper maybe if you have a super tight bolt a breaker bar is fine..but i agree use a normal wrench to tighten...
Oil filter removal tip Make a tin foil funnel to keep the engine clean. Some designs drip oil everywhere after the filter is removed. Newspapers or tarps help if you miss the oil pan.
Your right doing is still wrong...
Me: Sitting in my car. Scotty: You're doing it wrong!
Scotty s wife....,,dinner is ready Scotty. You cooked it wrong
Scotty's wife does a lot of things wrong.
Straight to the point and no distractions. Great work!
Fun fact: Scotty's middle name is Toyota.
Why do people like this, waste their time?
It's Atoyot. Scotty Atoyot Kilmer.
Honda*
Toyota should make Scotty edition car
I heard Val Kilmer is his half brother.
Looks like I was changing my oil right this whole time
Ya so was I
Same here!!! 🤣
yep me too
Me three.
If you’re not yelling doing it, you’re doing it wrong 🤣
One thing I noticed @ 2:35 & he forgot to mention was he put a date (& probably the mileage) on the oil filter with a sharpie, which is an outstanding idea!
Jason Jackson or just write it in your service records, on a piece of paper in your glovebox, or anywhere handy really. I mean it’s not a terrible idea to write it on your filter, but unless it’s seeable from the top like his, which I’m sure you must know isn’t very common, in order to see when your last change was done, you’ll have to jack up your vehicle and look underneath it. Seems like way too much trouble to go to for that.
@@joshuaford9714 agreed n for that matter anything U do ur car even simple fuse should write down on a record in small notepad for future reference.
done it for years.
@@joshuaford9714 just make a label and put it in your door jam stating next miles it has to be changed at.
Good spot Mr Jackson!
I watched to see if I was doing something wrong. Yep, now I need to lower my standards to do it right.
Haha, I did the double gasket thing once. I have 25 years experience. This guy teaches everything I learned from my dad. This guy is entertaining
Yep, you only do the double gasket thing.....once, cause it's a helluva mess to clean up. lol
@@ZombiesIII yup, starts gushing out.
A lot of of newer cars use a crush washer on the oil drain plug, it prevents leaks when it's crushed and it also helps prevent the stripping of the oil pan threads. Use one.
Scotty Kilmer owns the company that makes oil plug gaskets.
I'm glad someone in the comments is like minded, 😂 in pushing half a mile miles between my two cars, both have factory gaskets
Related to val
dorman or genuine toyota?
Scotty you rascal. Making money coming and going.
Gaskets are cheap, your motor is not!
I can't think of the last time I changed the oil plug gasket. Never a drip/leak/residue, so it seems to do just fine. Fun to watch you work on a clone of our minivan though, at least the engine, headlights, and most of the bay.
I love it when Scottie goes “ughhh” when he loosens a bolt
Me too
Scotty: *swears in past two videos* Also Scotty: *Leave a clean, non offensive comment below!*
Joshua Person lmao
It’s the heat in Houston.
That's the brand name of the fan
That's a big a$$ f***ing fan!!
Hi from Greece ! We love U.S. and love Scotty's video !
@Aaron Cubitt Yeap it's true .Οι αγγλοσαξονες ποτε δεν αγάπησαν τον πολιτισμό , οπως και οι ... ξερεις εσυ :)
Wish more people shares your sediment. They always bash the US.
Helllloooo Greece! Nice country you got there ! (America, Chicago )
I laughed at the tennis player picture... those girls grunt louder than Scotty turning that filter lol.
I’m 18 and love cars but I don’t have the knowledge when it comes to these sort of things so your videos are really teaching me! Informative and really entertaining thank you.
You may laugh, but we have in our kits old Woollen socks with the toe or foot cut off. When reaching in past hot parts or pipes, sliding the sock on your arm and palm enables you to not get burnt when near hot areas. As the best oil to drain is one warm enough to get it to its thinnest viscosity. Loosen the oil cap to enable the oil to escape cleanly or it may do the ole gloop surge gloop and mess up you and the floor! Finally when filling with new oil always pull the dipstick so that trapped air will not try and push past the oil filler cap entry and create the mess Scotty has warned of. It allows the oil to get past pooling inside the head but instead to go easily down the drain ports back to the sump. All my techs have followed these guidelines and have kept themselves, our customers engine bays and my floors safe & clean!
Yep, the oil should be warm when it is changed....flows better and does not take as long to drain. Wear protection on hands and eyes if you are crawling under a car. Doing an oil change or other work under a car is much better on a lift. Scotty is just a shade tree mechanic. I've crawled under lots of cars, but would have rather had a lift. Now there are good electric ones that are worth the investment if you do a lot of car work, even at home.
@Mark Godfrey Ha ha, I rather you buy me a lift (and a larger garage). PS: Being a shade tree mechanic does not mean they are not competent, just that they are not working in an enclosed shop environment, which often includes a lift of some sort. Cheers.
Scotty Kilmer channel: You're changing the oil wrong You're fixing your car wrong Don't buy a new car Don't buy a used car Don't trust anyone Don't do anything
His motto is DON'T.
Buy an old Toyota... though..that yes.. Everyone just buy old Toyotas, already!
@SergeTheBlerge You forgot “Doing THIS will RUIN your Car”
It's clickbaiiiiiiii t
You forgot Chevy
YOU MAKE IT SEEM SO EASY .LOVE THE EFFORT YOU PUT IN TO TEACH US WHAT YOU KNOW .THANK YOU
WHY ARE YOU TYPING LIKE THIS
I Love this guy Man lol!! You give me the motivation to take out renew every important part in my car 1 part at a time! And i know you would say if it aint broke then dont fix it but all these videos makes me want to slowly with time renew every part in my 2007 Honda Accord!
Scotty’s next video: Own a car? You’re doing it wrong
Scotty: You are owning it wrong!
if not Honda or Toyota,that would be correct.Judging by ur thumbnail,you appear to be not wrong.(nice car)
I could see possibly issues with some ppl useing a 24in breaker bar to tighten the oil drain plug...
But he didnt use it to tighten the new filter, he only used it to loosen the old one. He only hand-tightened the new one.
@@unclebrucelive the oil plug, not the filter.
I always change my oil hot.because I agree about the sediments being suspended...also tighten the oil filter hand tight then I snug up on it about a 1/4 to 1/2 turn with a 3/8 drive ratchet useing one of those cup style oil filter wrenches...I don't trust hand tight but never over tight.
I do it but only because it's always in a bad spot. I have never over done it. But you need to use common sense.
@@snouter wrong! warm, not hot
Scotty is the Vehicle Master! Love your advice and personality
There is a reason to use synthetic if you are far enough north as I am. Synthetic doesn't get quite so viscose as standard oil under extreme cold conditions. My Yaris has a fairly weak starter motor, and the synthetic made a tremendous difference.
I’ve got everything except for the big*ss fan. Gotta get me one of those.
Harbor freight Labor Day sale 25% off coupon...
Got too much crap to fit a car in your garage? I actually like that about Scotty
Want something better. Get a central unit fan with the motor that runs it. Heavy and might blow some tools away, definitely is cheaper to come by.
just wait for a super windy day, let nature be the fan
“You gotta put the oil on slower you’re gonna make a mess” !! 😂😂😂 Scotty ur killing me 😂😂
On that particular engine yes. I have one. There's maybe a 1/2 depth from the filler hole to the top of the head. Putting the oil in too fast will result in it spilling over the top of the valve cover beneath that plastic cover, making a mess.
On some motors the oil with come out the dipstick if it's out while you pour
I've been changing my own oil for 40 years. I've never replaced a single drain plug gasket. Not defending my behavior, just stating fact. There have never been any consequences.
Me too😬
Never on mine, but on many customers vehicles.
Yep! Same here!
Never needed a 1-1/2ft breaker bar either.
Some gaskets need to be replaced every time, the crushable ones, others do not, like the one on my Mitsubishi Triton.....
No nonsense info, that's what we need. Thank you for all your work !
*Absolutely nobody* *scotty* I paid $300 for my Toyota Celica I change the oil with dirt and it still runs like a dream.
So you’re the guy who got my old 77 celiac eh🤢
Lol that probably is a $300 car now I think he bought it brand new. And I subscribe to the therapy that it doesn't matter what kind of oil you use, as long as you change it, and change it often
yea at the very least scotty should've bought High mileage.
I've been changing my own oil for the last 18 years and I've never changed the drain plug gasket. I don't even care to check if it had one or not and I've never had problems with leaks. Leave it to Scotty to make me worried about my oil changes from now on...... Because of course I'm doing it wrong.
I have been changing mine since I was a teen I am now in my 50's and mine never had one either it looks to be built in solid no other pieces.
I know..me too. Now I gotta ck. And get a new one lol.
Ive never even seen one. The plug i have just seals up aginst the machined surface. No all the plugs ive seen do this thats like 10 cars.
There was one car that has a copper washer. The thing was like $3 a pop. That's as much as a cheap Fram filter! It was soft enough to deform when the plug was properly torqued. I learned to file it flat again very carefully and polish with a diamond stone, and I got up to more than a dozen changes on the same washer before going to a quick stop, where they just threw on a steel washer, and I was like -- WTF, why was the mfg use the copper one in the first place?!
@@gdeangelkick That's a good question that I wish I knew the answer to!
Another tip. Use six-point sockets or wrenches with the drain plug.
bingo
I'm glad he is answering many questions and passing on the knowledge
0:53 Freakin Jiffy Lube places. Shouldn't have to use a Breaker Bar on the Oil Drain Bolt 😡
Jiffy lube doesnt use breaker bars on the drain plug I was there yesterday 😂
when you take it to a shop, everything is either way too tight or not tight enough.
Aint that the truth. I swear they freaking tighten those bolts to 50 ft lbs because theyre too cheap to put a new gasket on it
Buy the oil by the gallon or 5 quart jug.
Also if you find your oil container “chugging” as your refilling, tip it in from the side rather than straight out the front! Much smoother flow
This is were he let's himself down, it's little school boy errors like this.
@@PeterSmith-ls7ut can’t teach old dogs new tricks
@@blackdynamitemn3259 like, trying to teach your granny how to suck eggs! He's doing it wrong.
Wrong. There's a friggin picture ON THE OIL CONTAINER showing how to pour it properly. It's not about getting the oil out. It's about getting air in!
@@goodisnipr you are exactly correct about needing the air, this is the exact reason he is pouring wrong lol his way tremendously slows the rate you can pour, this is why I wanted to see if anyone else noticed
YOU HAVE SO MUCH PASSION FOR YOUR WORK AND FOR YOUR WILL TO TEACH US ALL! THANK YOU ! I WILL COME TO SEE YOU IN PERSON SOON! AMEN!
Tightening the drain plug with a breaker bar is just asking for trouble
@Stacy Lynn Sutherland use a torque wrench that's what they are for
Use an impact wrench on full power. :)
When you do these things enough you don't need a torque wrench. You really only need one when you're building an engine
South Aussie Aquatics speedees employees be like^
Crossed threaded makes it real tight with a impact the best way lol
Breathing air? You're doing it wrong!
Rev up your lungs!!
Most people do breath wrong, im not joking
@@FrostedZaibatsu wow
You guys are hilarious!
Just bought ramps... been doing it with a floor jack for 40 years... so glad I got the ramps!
Recommend adding as much oil as you can to the new filter before installing unless it goes on sideways. Also recommend torquing oil drain plug if you are a noob. We old guys know how tight it should be by feel. Extension bar for loosening perhaps but not for tightening as it's easy to overtighten. Use a torque wrench when unsure.
What's the nm torque for a sump plug?
@@klang180 Sorry don't know. I just know when its tight.
@@klang180 Around 20-40 Nm. Depends on the car
Don't do this unless you never want to unscrew the plug ever again. The recommended torque is often waaaaay too high.
Scotty: Rev Up Your Engines! Also Scotty: Don't Do It.
Mother nature : Starts to thunder Scotty: You’re thundering the wrong way.
The oil you want to drain should still be warm though. And if the design allows it, put at least some new oil in the filter, as well as on the new filter gasket. Obviously, you can't put much in an oil filter that mounts near the horizontal, but one that points down is good. The reason for this is that there is less delay in the oil getting circulated. Of course, that small volume of oil won't be filtered, but a good quality oil should not need filtering anyway when it is just put in the motor straight from the container. Oil drain plugs have a specified torque setting, so use torque wrench until you know the 'feel" of how much to tighten it. I would not recommend using a "breaker bar" to tighten the sump drain plug back up. Use a short ring spanner or similar, so you don't over tighten and possibly strip the thread. It is also good practice not to fill up just assuming the engine will take all the recommended 5 litres or whatever. For a five litre capacity, pour in 4.5 litres, run the car for a few minutes, and check the dip-stick again. There could be a reason why it won't take the full amount, like doing the oil change on a slope. A few cars can have more than one sump drain plug-some older models of the Honda accord come to mind. This is because a few cars may have a common sump for the engine and transmission. It is a routine and simple process, but as Scotty demonstrates, don't be too casual or careless doing it, or you could end up damaging something, and having an expensive repair bill. If the oil is too warm [you are wearing gloves right?], then let the sump plug fall into the oil. You can always fish it out with a magnet later.
Great response. So much emphasis on the oil viscosity, but not paying attention to torque settings.
I lost it when he had the tennis player picture up while grunting LMAO
I already know how to change my oil, I'm just watching this for entertainment haha Scotty is the man!!
1) Fill the new filter 50% with new oil, oil pressure builds faster on your first start. 2) You can get 5 quarts of Pennzoil Platinum at Wally World for $25.
Flaxseed Oil cant do that when the filter goes in facing up. Gravity will have it’s say first.
You cannot prefill a cartridge filter.
Great Job. You're an excellent source for the DIYer Auto mechanic.
Love your work Scotty you always give great advice
The tennis player photo when he was grunting 🤣🤣🤣👌👌👌
Oil change? Let me grab the giant fan!
Great info! Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us.
I just learned the genius engineers at Ford located the oil filter, in my 2003 Taurus, DIRECTLY OVER MY STARTER! At oil-change time, carelessly removing the (horizontally oriented) oil filter will bathe the starter in luxurious dirty motor-oil dramatically shortening its useful life. The new starter installed on my car last week only cost $600+ dollars (including tow). Thanks Ford!
Honestly, I don't think I've ever replaced an oil plug gasket!!
I have replaced one exactly zero times. I have also had one leak exactly zero times.
Charlie S. I’ve replaced a couple out of the hundreds I’ve done. Never saw a filter gasket stick either.
I only replaced it if it was leaking before I changed it. Inspect the old one when you take the plug off. Looks ok it probably won't leak.
Charlie S. 280k miles of oil changes on my Avalon and still using the same plug gasket lol
heck, the "gasket" on my oil plugs are a copper washer...
Dirty funnel for the win!
Consistently the best auto maintenance, repair and advice on YT.
Switched to a AGS accufit drain plug, so much easier to undo and hold onto and never cross threaded. I always use a new gasket. It's a simple design that makes oil changes easier.
I highly recommend filling the oil filter before installing helps cycle the oil as I started
The oil filter was going downwards it would spill out if he filled the filter... 🤦♂️
All u do for that is turn on the Acc for about a minute or so an start it
That s right man , i m doing this for years. To avoid engine to run dry , even for few seconds.
just depends on how your oil filter is positioned. Some oil filters go on with the threads facing downwards and the sealed side of the fliter pointing upwards. If you were to fill an oil filter with oil in that sort of application you will spill oil everywhere as you are trying to screw on that oil filter because gravity will be pulling the oil out. With oil filters that are positioned the opposite way, then yes you can fill with oil before installing. There are even some applications that are halfway in between or sideways and some that are tilted.
Doesn't work with filters that are open end down as this one was
YELLING... Scotty's good at it! Another great video.
This man had his own show on cbs called Crank it up! Scotty love your channel man been watching you since I was a kid.
Thanks Scott u answered many of my questions !
For the love of God, please show people how to pour oil from a container sideways so it won't glug. Do a 60 minute video about it.
Thank god someone called that out. Drives me insane that people don't know how to pour oil out of a gallon jug. Same thing with lacquer thinner. You pour with the opening at the high point, not the low. Gotta let a void develop for air to pads to avoid the glug glugs.
@@mattodonnell9182 Some folks just love a good glug glug glug glug glug and fun to watch the oil splatter. Even better if you get some in your eyes. Scotty uses his sunglasses for eye protection.
Shop towels?
OR from the pour spout up top, high point. Our funnel is 5"×9" on top, catches any overspill
@@gerald7044 Na, just brain surgery and oil pouring. Nuttin else is important.
I was taught for the oil filter and the oil plug to hand tighten, then give one quarter turn tight then youre good to go
That is what the toyota manual says
Thanks, me too. Anyways, proper torque is best.....or the old best way .
Well according to scotty just grunt like maria sharapova 3 times and your good
Yup my Suzuki manual says hand tighten only for the oil filter.
Isnt that right spark plug
Gotta love Scotty. Thank you.
Scotty fails to say that if you need a breaker bar to loosen the drain plug, someone screwed up tightening it way too much. Risk of stripping the threads. One should always drain the oil when it is HOT, not cool. Use a real oil filter wrench, not a strap if you can.
As a mechanic I frequently had to chase the oil drain plug threads on the oil pans to get them to thread off and on without a wrench once loosened. Usually the drain plugs had yellow paint on them indicating that they had last been at Jiffy Lube. Don’t over torque the drain plug! I use a combination wrench and leave it under the car until I have tightened the drain plug. I have never had to replace the oil drain plug gasket or use an oil filter wrench on my own cars.
@greenman7612 - re: "HOT vs. cool," ehhh?!? Would "cold" be an option for you?! Draining when "cold" means the oil filter won't leak much when spinning off, yes - the old oil takes longer to drain = Big Deal !!
STP Oil is like water n light color.
Gasket!? I didn't even know that you had to put a new one! Thanks Scotty!
theyre good to have if you're doing a lot, on some cars you dont have to, some cars you do
Some oil change places do that part of the service like Quikfit in the UK
Stupidly
I bought one of these cars recently for my new daily ( 2003 lexus es300 ) and now I know easily how to change oil on it!
Crap changed my oil today did not know about the oil plug gasket. Been doing it wrong for years. Great Video Scotty.
I guess I'm guilty. I never change the drain plug gasket. :-(
Me too. I never even thought about it.
It's a crush gasket, so every time it's used it forms a fresh seal. If you don't change it you risk some leakage. But if you aren't leaking anything, then you're probably fine. But I'm sure you know this.
@@AndyRock1 Yup, never had a leak....YET!
Same here & I've never had any issues
May the crush washer God's be with you.
I just subscribed to your channel and man you sure do post a lot of videos. Keep up the good work! I like what your doing.
You have been missing out man i learned alot over the past 7 yrs because of scotty
@@justanothernewyorkcityrat2146 Scotty is a extremely valuable asset finally some one not endorsed by a product. If car makers lobby to hard they will make these videos illegal one day. We already lost the right to repair in California.
informative and entertaining,,thankyou Scotty 👍✌
I've been changing my own oil on all my vehicles since 1975 my high school vehicle back then was a 1966 Chevy Impala SS 327 V8...
I only use olive oil (native extra) for extra protection. My engine sounds like a Ferrari and drives like a Fiat!
I wouldn’t use anything other than extra virgin in a brand new car.
RUS38 oh sure virgin extra on a brand new car makes sense!
Your cracking me up!!
I use peanut oil or pig fat oil, thy have high boiling point. Much better than Olive oil imo.
Bacon grease is good for a hung up lifter. I put a few ons in the gas tank, too. Keeps away the neferious kind.
Ayeeee first Scotty you're the best, learned a lot from your videos
Love it Scotty, keep making videos.
Good gouge about the gaskets, that just never occurred to me! IMO, every home mechanic should have a Chilton's or Haynes onhand, if for nothing else to know what the proper torques and volumes are.
You need to clean your funnel. It looked pretty dirty and I wouldn't want to wash the dirt into the engine. I keep mine in a ziplock bag.
Cool
Even pros make mistakes
Nevermind actually checking the oil after you fill it
C Hansen, Correct -- the capacity does not change, but the amount that drains out does, depending on temperature and time left draining. Checking the level is easy so why not do it? Overfilling should be avoided, and if the level is low when checked a week later, how could you be sure whether it had been correct or low right after refilling if you had not checked it then?. smh
If you put in the correct amount for your vehicle there is no need to check it it didn't go anyplace, lol
@@Benni711 If you pour in the capacity of the engine that it calls for then that's how much should be in the engine so there's no need tocheck it
@@willschultz5452 always check the stick. People make mistakes, data isn't always right. Your eyes and mind is the best tool you got.
Man, you have got some good videos. Thank you.
Reassurance from Scotty I've been doing this right for fifty years. There's a reason my engines and turbochargers are so reliable. It aint luck! When I buy a used car always at the right price, irrespective of what the owner or seller tells me, I always drop the old oil at first opportunity. That wodge of invoices is NOT reliable proof that Oil and Filter was changed last week in previous ownership. The condition of the old stuff on the Dip Stick does not always support that. A quick wipe over the old oil filter with a clean rag can have it looking like a new one just fitted... 'appens. I always write the Mileage on the Filter when I change it. I service all my family's cars and cannot remember all that stuff. I always put a sticky label somewhere in the engine compartment with details of the oil change, dates, mileage and Oil Grade used. Servicing my own and my family's cars has over many years saved us a fortune in servicing costs. Plus the bonus of knowing the job has not only been done, but done properly. Here's something I do with cheap old cars but otherwise tidy cars bought with Oil that looks and runs like black Treacle. I drop the Oil HOT and leave drain plug out overnight .. there will still be the regular drip as the old stuff continues to work down and out of the engine even in the next morning. There will still be LOTS of old contaminated sludge lurking in the engine including old burnt oil varnish like residue on Cam Followers and other key components. That means noisy slow to return "tappets" and other parts of the Valve Gear. I must stress that I am NOT recommending this, only that it works for me with old cars with uncertain maintenance programmes in previous ownership. Here's what I do since a wiser car guy than I told me about back in the day. I replace the drain plug in the Sump/Oil Pan and fill the engine with DIESEL FUEL to the correct level. Then use the car gently for say twenty-thirty miles, then drain the Diesel Fuel ( which is Oil as Diesels are known as Oil Burners for good reason ) HOT. The first time I did this I was amazed at the muck that the Diesel Fuel flushed out which would otherwise remain in the engine and contaminate the fresh new oil. The Diesel Flush means that the oil is still clean and clear on the dipstick for some hundreds of miles later. The simple drop and fill Oil Change will see the fresh engine oil black soon after starting from contaminants still lurking in the engine.. It has worked for me many times. That noisy valve gear is now a near silent rustle sound. Throttle response is better and even fuel consumption improves. Never done that with the new cars I've bought of course. I always service my cars myself from day one new so know they've been well looked after. I have known passing neighbours when seeing the oil drained from my cars bought new, have told me they would not hesitate to put my old oil in their cars' engines. I do change engine oil at half the manufacture recommended. As Scotty rightly often reminds us, good quality Oil is far less expensive than a replacement engine. Keep up the good work Scotty. I'm off to ring dat Bell .. ;-))
@MG John - Whew !! Anything else you care to share with the audience ... after the long high school thesis on oil changes ??
@1:23 that's the first time I heard Scotty cuss! Lol had a good laugh too 😊 keep it up Scotty we love you sir!
I know ! That was funny lol
I like to put a little new oil in the filter prior to putting it on, just to soak the filter media, not so much it pours back out, to aide the start up and get the oil flowing on post change a little fast. Just don’t like starving the oil pump, lifters etc.
I do the same thing with my Avalanche considering the oil filter faces upward so I can be filled
LeewardStudios it’s more of a big deal on massive diesel machines and trucks with multiple big filters but it doesn’t hurt little car engines so it’s not a bad idea if the filter faces up
It's nice if you can do it but some filters are such a pain to get to that you can't.
Scotty is The Man !