This seems so trivial that I hesitated to post it, but what the heck...
Whenever I purchase motor oil I automatically check and tighten the caps before I even get to the cash register. Years of routinely seeing wet bottles on the store shelves led to that, plus the desire to avoid an Exxon Valdez situation in my car trunk. Last December I bought 15 bottles of Pennzoil Platinum at AutoZone, and I can almost bet my mortgage that I checked the caps. The bottles sat for a half-year before I decided to sell them to a coworker the other day (as separate story). So I had the bottles in plastic grocery bags on the rear floorboard of my car for two days before removing them at work. I found that at least one of the bottles had leaked at least a cup of oil. Luckily most of it was trapped in the bag, but some of the oil found its way onto the carpet.
This puzzled me since I knew – or at least was ALMOST certain – that I had tightened them upon purchase. Later that day I checked the one bottle of Pennzoil I didn’t sell, but kept in the trunk of my car as “road oil,” a bottle that I KNOW I checked the cap on since it can only rest on its side where I stored it in the trunk, so it was mandatory to check that cap. And that cap was modestly loose as well! This surprised me since I KNOW I checked it. So a lesson was learned: I tightened all those bottle caps in winter when it was cold. When I sold the oil the other day, all the bottles were warm to the touch. Caps tightened in cold winter = looser caps the following warm summer, enough so that they may leak. Like I said, an almost trivial matter, but one that might save you from needing to shampoo your car or trunk carpet, so a worthwhile one nonetheless.
Whenever I purchase motor oil I automatically check and tighten the caps before I even get to the cash register. Years of routinely seeing wet bottles on the store shelves led to that, plus the desire to avoid an Exxon Valdez situation in my car trunk. Last December I bought 15 bottles of Pennzoil Platinum at AutoZone, and I can almost bet my mortgage that I checked the caps. The bottles sat for a half-year before I decided to sell them to a coworker the other day (as separate story). So I had the bottles in plastic grocery bags on the rear floorboard of my car for two days before removing them at work. I found that at least one of the bottles had leaked at least a cup of oil. Luckily most of it was trapped in the bag, but some of the oil found its way onto the carpet.
This puzzled me since I knew – or at least was ALMOST certain – that I had tightened them upon purchase. Later that day I checked the one bottle of Pennzoil I didn’t sell, but kept in the trunk of my car as “road oil,” a bottle that I KNOW I checked the cap on since it can only rest on its side where I stored it in the trunk, so it was mandatory to check that cap. And that cap was modestly loose as well! This surprised me since I KNOW I checked it. So a lesson was learned: I tightened all those bottle caps in winter when it was cold. When I sold the oil the other day, all the bottles were warm to the touch. Caps tightened in cold winter = looser caps the following warm summer, enough so that they may leak. Like I said, an almost trivial matter, but one that might save you from needing to shampoo your car or trunk carpet, so a worthwhile one nonetheless.
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