Never used one, unless my Lexus dealership counts. Got a killer(?) deal when we bought the car. It gets warshed, vacuumed, etc.
Supposedly use M1, but who the heck knows?
Supposedly use M1, but who the heck knows?
Oh my co-worker is contemplating a lawsuit against jiffy lube. She went in for a $39.99 oil change and did "$500" in work she didn't ask for. Plus they stole a pendant off of her keychain and after making a scene they gave it back.I've had less than stellar experiences with quickie lubes. Over-tightened drain plugs and filters, and they love to play the upsell game. "Oh, you can see dirt in your air filter! You should pay us large sums of money to change it!". Well, yeah, that air filter has about 5,000 miles on it, and they do tend to collect dirt. I will happily go out in freezing cold weather to change my own oil.
"Several quarts" remain in the engine? Seriously? You must be getting motor oil confused with transmission fluid.I concur that quick lubes are iffy. Not because they suck oil put of the dipstick tube, but because they only care about fast profits. This can occasionally lead to various damages that they insist they didn't cause.
Also, I use the mity vac (knockoff) for my cars and it is great. Any sludge or deposits get sucked out with the oil unless, of course, it was badly neglected and requires a flush. Besides, several qts of old oil remain in the engine even if it drains for hours. There is no way to get all of it out by pouring in some clean oil with the plug removed.
Jiffy Lube are the worstOther than the price I had zero issues when I took my car to valvoline and I always had a good experience.
Now that I have a place where I can DIY again I don’t take my cars anywhere anymore but, if I had to, it would be valvoline
I’ve seen too many people have issues with Speedee, Walmart, Oil Changers etc.
The question is, does Valvoline's machine suck every drop of oil out? What if it leaves half a quart in there?Other than the price I had zero issues when I took my car to valvoline and I always had a good experience.
Now that I have a place where I can DIY again I don’t take my cars anywhere anymore but, if I had to, it would be valvoline
I’ve seen too many people have issues with Speedee, Walmart, Oil Changers etc.
I saw this the other day. Do they work as well as the Valvoline machine?Upselling, dirty untrained sloppy techs, poor management, lack of honesty -
Oil removal via extraction -
This isn’t bad at all less chance of leaks, stripped drain pan/bolt, no residual oil to drip off undercarriage and for some newer high end vehicle preferred or only method.
Don't know what brand the big shops use but I'm sure for home use you'd be satisfied with an extractor like the one you shared. You'll never extract every drop same goes for conventional drain method there's always going to be residual.
....but they reuse the crush washer. It becomes a pointless exercise that is only for show.You even hear the click of the torque wrench being used on the oil drain plug.
Reuse of the crush washer doesn't bother me. I change it when i DIY on the subsequent oil changes. And to be honest, i don't even change it every service either.....but they reuse the crush washer. It becomes a pointless exercise that is only for show.
If any car dealer touts "free oil changes for life", that's an open invitation for them to point out all the deficiencies and hazards on the vehicle, and they WILL find some!The dealer oil change "stations" are just their version of a quicky lube. I had "free" aka forced pre-pay oil changes during the warranty period on our Toyota and had many problems - over fill twice, ruined air filter from their "inspection", once they didn't even change the oil.
Whenever someone else works on your car your beholden to the skill of the technician, irrelevant of where you go.