This has to be rage bait at this point.
I wonder this too. Most small engines are around the one quart capacity and it makes no sense as to why you can’t use fresh oil.Why does everyone seem to want to run junk oil in a small engine. It isn't like they hold 10 gallons of oil.
Is a few quarts of quality oil cheaper that trying to find a new what ever to either put on the what ever or completely replace it?
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A lot of small engines are a huge pain to change the oil on too, and you end up making a big mess. Fortunately a lot of my own equipment I have put extended oil drain hoses on, or have come up with creative tupperware sizes for drain pans to make less of a mess, but if I'm going to be going through the hassle of tipping a lawn mower on its side I'm putting in the 16oz or so of new oil.I wonder this too. Most small engines are around the one quart capacity and it makes no sense as to why you can’t use fresh oil.
The mentality seems to be:
Expensive OPE gets run its normal course for a season and exposed to the appropriate elements of heat and moisture. Time to change the oil? Sure, I got some already dark used oil of questionable origin. Bingo!
I've started using my brake bleeder to vacuum out the oil from push mowers. It just takes a few of the cup-fulls to pull the half a quart out of the sump. Not too much of a hassle and better than tipping it over.A lot of small engines are a huge pain to change the oil on too, and you end up making a big mess. Fortunately a lot of my own equipment I have put extended oil drain hoses on, or have come up with creative tupperware sizes for drain pans to make less of a mess, but if I'm going to be going through the hassle of tipping a lawn mower on its side I'm putting in the 16oz or so of new oil.
I have a Briggs and Stratton 19.5hp riding mower. Its got one of the engines with a paper air filter and oil filter. I change the oil every year and the filter every other year because I'm cheap. I'm taking the pressure washer and blasting the dirt off the oil dump pipe pipe plug, loosen it a quarter turn and blast it again and dump it, catching the 1yr old 20w-50 oil and saving it for the push mowers. I mark the container saying that it's reclaimed oil.
I would say the oil that comes out isn't black, it's more like it's tinted.
The oil stays filters with a fram synthetic endurance oil filter so it should be fairly clean.
I built a drip oil burner for burning lube oil - mostly compressor oil but I used to burn engine oil too. A pyramid of cast iron frying pans and sand. It worked well but it made the neighborhood smell like burning plastic bags when the barometric was low.I kind of get the oil-reuse thought. It just seems like a waste not to re-use it somehow. I've tried making a cheap oil burner heater work as a waste oil burner (fail), used it as a wood treatment with linseed oil (50/50) with very good results, and even attempted to filter it and use it as a fuel (then chickened out). I'm going to refine my fuel processing, but its a low-priority hobby, not a need.
But the ROI needs to be there fore me if I'm going through the effort to change oil, it might as well be fresh and new.
I do have an extractor I will use for certain machines and agree it does cut down on the mess by a lot. Flipping mowers really isn't too bad, but I guess my point was if I'm going through the process of changing any fluid in a piece of equipment, it will be with new fluid. If one is using old oil, why change it at all? Who's to say the oil coming out is worse than what is being put in?I've started using my brake bleeder to vacuum out the oil from push mowers. It just takes a few of the cup-fulls to pull the half a quart out of the sump. Not too much of a hassle and better than tipping it over.
Only if you work for an oil company.This has to be rage bait at this point.
In a real busy spring I could see a dozen potential junk mowers that roll in or that i find with no oil on the dip stick.I wonder this too. Most small engines are around the one quart capacity and it makes no sense as to why you can’t use fresh oil.
The mentality seems to be:
Expensive OPE gets run its normal course for a season and exposed to the appropriate elements of heat and moisture. Time to change the oil? Sure, I got some already dark used oil of questionable origin. Bingo!
Once the crud has been flushed out I put new oil in them.I do have an extractor I will use for certain machines and agree it does cut down on the mess by a lot. Flipping mowers really isn't too bad, but I guess my point was if I'm going through the process of changing any fluid in a piece of equipment, it will be with new fluid. If one is using old oil, why change it at all? Who's to say the oil coming out is worse than what is being put in?
It has some sort of pump.Does that 19.5 Briggs of yours have an oil pump? I bought a new Deere last year - 19, or 20, or 21 HP or something like that - and now you've got me wondering if it has an oil filter, and so by default; an oil pump. I hardly ever use it as I hate to mow the grass. I think it only has 4-5 hours on it and my neighbor uses it sometimes. <g>