Cruzen
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2008
- Messages
- 97
- Location
- Scottsdale, Arizona
- Corvette
- White 1994 Roadster, Purple Pearl 1998 Roadster
Only once in my life have I ever paid someone to change the oil in any of my cars and that had to do with being on the road away from home. I preparation of doing the oil change on my C5, I got on the boards and read all the procedures related to changing oil in the C5 specifically the ideas about keeping the car level due to the flat oil pan etc. Most suggested to put the front of the Vette up on ramps then raise the rear level with the front. What a waste!! Here’s what I did.
Every drive, garage floor or whatever has a slight slope. I pointed the nose of the car down the slope. Put a jack on the drivers side under the shipping mounting hole then raised the Vette up so I could get under. I removed the drain plug, crawled out from under the Vette and lowered it back down making sure it cleared the drain pan. It was now level with the nose pointed down the slope and the oil was draining nicely. I removed the oil filler cap and pulled the dip stick up a bit to better vent the engine. I then went into the house ( it was already in the high 90’s at 7:00a.m. when I was doing this and I was sweating) fixed breakfast. Went back out after breakfast and saw that the oil had stopped dripping. Raised the Vette back up, got underneath replaced the drain plug and pulled the oil filter. Replaced the filter dropped the car back down and refilled with 6.5 quarts of oil. End of project!!
I don’t see the need to go through all the trouble with ramps under the front and jack stands under the rear etc. Why all the bother?? I did the same with one 38 year old floor jack. By the way, many years ago I fabricated a steel brace that fits between the raising pad of my floor jack and it’s frame. Once the car is raised I jam this brace under the pad just in case the jack’s hydraulic cylinder leaks down or fails completely. That way the car will not drop down on me. In 38 years this has never happened but you never know.
The trip is short,
enjoy the ride,
Denny
Every drive, garage floor or whatever has a slight slope. I pointed the nose of the car down the slope. Put a jack on the drivers side under the shipping mounting hole then raised the Vette up so I could get under. I removed the drain plug, crawled out from under the Vette and lowered it back down making sure it cleared the drain pan. It was now level with the nose pointed down the slope and the oil was draining nicely. I removed the oil filler cap and pulled the dip stick up a bit to better vent the engine. I then went into the house ( it was already in the high 90’s at 7:00a.m. when I was doing this and I was sweating) fixed breakfast. Went back out after breakfast and saw that the oil had stopped dripping. Raised the Vette back up, got underneath replaced the drain plug and pulled the oil filter. Replaced the filter dropped the car back down and refilled with 6.5 quarts of oil. End of project!!
I don’t see the need to go through all the trouble with ramps under the front and jack stands under the rear etc. Why all the bother?? I did the same with one 38 year old floor jack. By the way, many years ago I fabricated a steel brace that fits between the raising pad of my floor jack and it’s frame. Once the car is raised I jam this brace under the pad just in case the jack’s hydraulic cylinder leaks down or fails completely. That way the car will not drop down on me. In 38 years this has never happened but you never know.
The trip is short,
enjoy the ride,
Denny