Small engine oil changes

SDMF

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 24, 2015
Posts
10,942
Likes
663
Points
448
There isn’t hardly a small engine made that doesn’t make an unnecessary mess when trying to drain it.

Lawn mowers, lawn tractors, generators, 4-stroke boat motors of all sizes, snowblower, 4-stroke auger, ATV/UTV, golf cart, etc, etc, etc. Almost none of them drain clearly/cleanly. The drain hole is in a cooling fin, there’s a cross-member that sends the stream away from your drain pan, or the stream comes out horizontally spraying past your catch-pan and then ends up down to a dribble gooping up the side of your machine.

The vacuum containers make the job so easy you’ll actually do it. Do yourself a huge favor:

A82699E5-F373-4FEE-8CDD-2A47441B426A.jpeg
 


SDMF

Founding Member
Founding Member
Thread starter
Joined
Apr 24, 2015
Posts
10,942
Likes
663
Points
448
46149_zzz_500.jpg
Bought this from HF years ago. Worth every penny!
I don't disagree that if one has access to a compressor that's absolutely the way to go.

Major point being, either are easy and CLEAN enough that a person will actually do the oil changes.

I typically do my snowblower and lawnmower @ the same time in <15min either spring or fall. Then I typically do my boat motors (main and kicker) and lawn tractor. They take about an hr total to do all 3 including warm-up time on the garden hose/muffs and lower unit lube changes for the marine engines.
 


Fester

★★★★★ Legendary Member
Joined
Sep 15, 2018
Posts
968
Likes
869
Points
293
Location
Space
I don't disagree that if one has access to a compressor that's absolutely the way to go.

Major point being, either are easy and CLEAN enough that a person will actually do the oil changes.

I typically do my snowblower and lawnmower @ the same time in <15min either spring or fall. Then I typically do my boat motors (main and kicker) and lawn tractor. They take about an hr total to do all 3 including warm-up time on the garden hose/muffs and lower unit lube changes for the marine engines.
Yes that is the downfall to this one. A compressor is needed. Definitely go with the hand pump one if you wouldn't be using it in a garage with compressor access. You can fill this one with air to the max and more than likely get one oil change from it if the oil is warm with not being hooked to the compressor.
 

Traxion

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 29, 2015
Posts
1,656
Likes
268
Points
273
Location
Western Sodak
I have the hand pump model and use it in everything from my mower to Yamaha F200. It’s as good as it gets.
 

Fester

★★★★★ Legendary Member
Joined
Sep 15, 2018
Posts
968
Likes
869
Points
293
Location
Space
Guess I would need to see it in action. Gravity, a pan and some shop towels have always worked fine. Looks like one more thing to clean and store.
It’s sticking a straw down the dipstick tube and sucking. As long as the oil is warm it will suck clean. I have sucked the oil out and just to see how much was missed pulled the plug…..the results were impressive. I would say a drop every 10 seconds or so. In my opinion not any amount to be concerned with. As far as clean up I use a shop towel to wipe off the straw. I take the oil and dump it from the spout that unscrews into a container that I then haul to Oriely and dump for free. I think the main thing is to have the oil warm and recently run so the gunk is suspended in the oil. In my opinion way way way cleaner than the oil pan. The only reason I started with the “sucker” was due to a machine I have that doesn’t have a drain plug since doing that machine all of my machines get sucked clean now.
 


SDMF

Founding Member
Founding Member
Thread starter
Joined
Apr 24, 2015
Posts
10,942
Likes
663
Points
448
Guess I would need to see it in action. Gravity, a pan and some shop towels have always worked fine. Looks like one more thing to clean and store.
Boat motors come out the side of the mid-section shooting oil way out to start with and make a mess as they slow to a dribble down the side and lower-unit. My push mower's drain is under the deck, no good way to drain it without making a mess. Snow-blower shoots out the side and again dribbles down as the flow slows.

It's not that I can't do it with an oil pan and gravity, I've just found it cleaner and therefore faster as well as more convenient to use the vacuum container. As said above, 1 rag or paper-towel to wipe off the straw and you're done. I also find it easier to pour out when you get it to a facility that'll take used oil or friend who burns waste oil.

No having to work off your back, side, or knees either and I'd be lying if I didn't admit that I've become a fan of not having to work on stuff off my back, side, or knees.

The container is graduated so you know how much oil you've extracted.
 

SLE

★★★★★ Legendary Member
Joined
Jul 25, 2016
Posts
1,105
Likes
215
Points
233
Guess I would need to see it in action. Gravity, a pan and some shop towels have always worked fine. Looks like one more thing to clean and store.

I have stuff that has to be extracted, jet ski was the main culprit and the PTU on both my daughters and wife’s cars also require an extractor and of course the chain cases on a couple of the sleds. There is no drain plug on any of that stuff however I have found I use it on several of my small engines that are messy or clumsy to drain the oil from also. Works awesome.
 

Allen

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
Apr 24, 2015
Posts
10,515
Likes
1,539
Points
638
Location
Lincoln, kinda...
It’s the recommended way to change most Yamaha 4 stroke outboard. I didn’t think much of it till I used it. Impressive.
With the way that shit pours down over the whale tail and prop on my Yamaha, it might be the only thing I own that I'd use one of these on. My Merc has a pretty darn good oil drain system. The tractor, mowers, and other assorted crap of mine drain just fine. But that Yamaha 4S pisses me off every year with the mess it makes.
 

Twitch

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 14, 2015
Posts
2,466
Likes
496
Points
318
Location
Mandan
I have the hand pump one and I smile every time I use it because I envision the guy who designed it giving the middle finger to every guy who put the drain plug on every small engine I have in a place where the oil is guaranteed to make a mess either on said machine or my garage floor.
 


zoops

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 17, 2015
Posts
1,805
Likes
158
Points
278
With the way that shit pours down over the whale tail and prop on my Yamaha, it might be the only thing I own that I'd use one of these on. My Merc has a pretty darn good oil drain system. The tractor, mowers, and other assorted crap of mine drain just fine. But that Yamaha 4S pisses me off every year with the mess it makes.
Definitely makes a mess. I bought one of these several years ago, works quite well. I'll admit, I just bring the motor in to be winterized anymore 😩
Amazon product
 

Up Y'oars

Founding Member
Founding Member
Joined
May 16, 2015
Posts
2,261
Likes
59
Points
278
Location
Bismarck
I have that same product, Zoops and it’s a charm on boat motor oil changes. Cost me $9 back when?

Let’s just all agree the corporate mechanical engineers likely don’t have do many oil changes themselves wherever they reside. They aren’t as resourceful and afford someone else do these grimy tasks for them.

If they design such crappy oil extraction methods, why can’t they just add 10¢ more to provide a tube that fits the orifice? The owner buying said product can either hold onto it for periodic use or go their own route of tilting the small engines over while on the shop bench.
 

SDMF

Founding Member
Founding Member
Thread starter
Joined
Apr 24, 2015
Posts
10,942
Likes
663
Points
448
With the way that shit pours down over the whale tail and prop on my Yamaha, it might be the only thing I own that I'd use one of these on. My Merc has a pretty darn good oil drain system. The tractor, mowers, and other assorted crap of mine drain just fine. But that Yamaha 4S pisses me off every year with the mess it makes.
You'd use it for a whole bunch more than your outboard after you used it for your outboard.
 

Maddog

★★★★★ Legendary Member
Joined
May 6, 2017
Posts
2,604
Likes
991
Points
398
Location
One step closer to the end.
I have the hand pump one and I smile every time I use it because I envision the guy who designed it giving the middle finger to every guy who put the drain plug on every small engine I have in a place where the oil is guaranteed to make a mess either on said machine or my garage floor.
Would you take a picture of the part number and model of your unit for me please? Thanks

@Twitch
 


Recent Posts

Friends of NDA

Top Posters of the Month

  • This month: 190
  • This month: 157
  • This month: 143
  • This month: 137
  • This month: 114
  • This month: 95
  • This month: 93
  • This month: 93
  • This month: 88
  • This month: 78
Top Bottom