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| I find it hard to read all dipsticks when putting in new oil. Black/used oil is no problem.
Any suggestions for an additive to make the oil stand out better. Black or dark food dye maybe? |
Follow-Up Postings:
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- Posted by bill_kapaun Z8 Orygun (My Page) on Wed, Aug 22, 12 at 15:48
| I also have difficulty, so what I do is simply wait for a few hours for ALL the oil to run down the fill tube. I DO know how much oil to add, so I'm going to be VERY close in any case. |
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| New and clean oil is hard to see IMO and I have never heard of an additive to make it easier. On critical oil changes that is easy to see (due to dark oil) I'll measure the old if needed to refill (if it shows full). Otherwise, I look at "Repeatedly Cleaned" dip sticks at an angle vs straight on in good light helps me. The lighter the Oil's Weight "The Harder". |
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| I'm older and it's really hard for me to read due to the aggressive change intervals. I dye the XXXXXX area of the dip sticks with Blue or red machine dye..(good machine dye like Dykem Brand soaks into the metal with little residue) I also find if I roll it into the light I can see the wet line more clearly as suggested. Two methods I use.. IF you leave it in there long enough it will tarnish the dipstick making it easier to see??? |
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| Drill small holes(1/16-1/8") in the dipstick between the full and add marks. Mike |
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| I find the use of a small maglite flashlite helps when in darker garage areas or poor lighting conditions . |
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| Tried reading the dipstick in the dark with a flashlite, and in the sun. One of my mower dipsticks had low and high holes, the other did not. Nothing seemed to help. So I bought a pack of food dye at the dollar store. Thought I could add red to the 10-30 oil, and blue dye to the 30 oil, since I usually forget which oil in the mower. Added 10 drops of color to one cup of water for a test. Nice color. But when the food color was added to oil, it did not show up. Anyway, problem solved. I stick a piece of wood (ice bar stick or chop stick) in the oil hole, then match the level against the dipstick. Works great with regular fresh oil. One tip I like -- a digital camera is a great way to save info about your mower or engine. I take one pic of the mower manuf. sticker, another of the general engine info (i.e. B&S Sprint 3.75hp), and a third of the engine info. Is there a site when one can look up a older engine to find what the oil capacity is? I know what my newish Sear mower holds with the manual info, but the other mower is at least 30 years old and was bought cheap without a manual. Briggs and Stratton Sprint 3.75 hp. |
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| When the oil is fresh I use a paper towel. You pull the dipstick out, wipe it off, and then reinsert it per manufacturers directions. On a clean part of the paper towel, lay the dipstick so oil on the dipsticks leaves an impression on the paper towel. Then carefully compare the impression on the paper towel to the markings on the dipstick. |
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| You should be able to find the manual for your Sears tractor at this URL http://www.searspartsdirect.com/partsdirect/user-manuals Most manufacturers now have online manuals. John Deere has them back to the late 1990's models. I have a directory on the hard drive of my laptop where I collect e versions of all of my manuals, pictures like mentioned previously, and clippings I pick up on forums and elsewhere. With ever thing electronic, you can print your personal check list for the spring servicing of your lawn tractor. Complete it as you do each line, and when finished scan it back into the computer and maintain it in in your tractor information directory. With an e-manual you can print the parts of the manual so you will have it for trouble shooting |
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| A friend MADE his own dipstick once and I noticed how well it worked just for your problem. Here's what he did: He cut into the mark where the fill level was topped up. The dipstick he made was using 1/4" diameter rod. but the cut into it was all the way around and about I know most of your dipsticks are thin bits of spring steel 1) think about what you'll do The truck my friend had was a 1959 Ford panel truck. |
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| The older Craftsman engines that were not equipped with dip-sticks---you were supposed to add oil into the little hole on the side of the engine, until it ran out. You could wait a bit and add more, then put in the plug. I never figured out how to stack the oil up inside the engine--when the oil ran out, i put in the plug, and that was the correct amount to be in the engine! RJ |
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| Suggestion 1: Rough up the end of the dipstick with sandpaper Sugg 2: make a series of dimples along the end of the dipstick with a center punch Sugg 3: File a series of notches along the side of the dipstick Sugg 4: Drill a couple of small holes in the dipstick at the "FULL" and "ADD OIL" marks |
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