Hi guys,
New poster, but long time lurker...
I wanted to tell you guys about my new wonder tool- my Mityvac 7300. I bought it to do oil changes on a friends boat, but since then I've used it to do change all fluids on all the cars.
To change power steering fluid I first drain and refill the reservoir, then disconnect the return line and shove the suction tube down the line (it's a snug fit with a tube inside a tube). Then lift up the front wheels and turn the wheel lock to lock. Magically all the fluid in the rack is sucked out. Be sure to top off the reservoir since now the rack is empty.
When it comes to brakes first drain the brake fluid reservoir, then filling up with fresh fluid, then using the pump to suction out old fluid out of all of each caliper. Beats the [censored] out of having my impatient wife pump the pedal for ever.
ATF jobs are way easier since you can drain most of the fluid first instead of having all the fluid slosh out when you drop the pan.
I always paid the dealer to do the ATF and power steering fluid changes, but now I'll be doing it myself and saving $110 - $180 a pop, plus doing it more often which is good for the vehicles. (The ATF at 18k miles looked so-so, but the magnet had lots of break-in debris.)
The cheapest place I could find online was Amazon, and I even had a Xmas gift cert to the pump only cost me $25!!
New poster, but long time lurker...
I wanted to tell you guys about my new wonder tool- my Mityvac 7300. I bought it to do oil changes on a friends boat, but since then I've used it to do change all fluids on all the cars.
To change power steering fluid I first drain and refill the reservoir, then disconnect the return line and shove the suction tube down the line (it's a snug fit with a tube inside a tube). Then lift up the front wheels and turn the wheel lock to lock. Magically all the fluid in the rack is sucked out. Be sure to top off the reservoir since now the rack is empty.
When it comes to brakes first drain the brake fluid reservoir, then filling up with fresh fluid, then using the pump to suction out old fluid out of all of each caliper. Beats the [censored] out of having my impatient wife pump the pedal for ever.
ATF jobs are way easier since you can drain most of the fluid first instead of having all the fluid slosh out when you drop the pan.
I always paid the dealer to do the ATF and power steering fluid changes, but now I'll be doing it myself and saving $110 - $180 a pop, plus doing it more often which is good for the vehicles. (The ATF at 18k miles looked so-so, but the magnet had lots of break-in debris.)
The cheapest place I could find online was Amazon, and I even had a Xmas gift cert to the pump only cost me $25!!