I changed the oil yesterday which was a pretty simple task.
1. Pulled the drain hose through the drain hole just above the TAPS plate.
2. Warmed engine for 5 or 10 minutes with the fake-a-lake.
3. Removed the cap off the drain hose (added a piece of clear hose to get it to clear the TAPS plate and waited.
4. And waited.
5. And waited.
6. Finally the oil began to flow but way to slow.
7. Hookup up an old RV water pump I found in the shop to a 12 volt battery and connected it to the drain line and sucked out the oil in less than 3 minutes.
8. Put the cap on the drain line and pushed it back through the drain and put the plug in the hull.
9. Secured the drain line inside the bilge area.
10. Changed the oil filter (Fram PH8A is what was on it)
11. Since the 6.0 filter is high on the engine, changing the filter was simple and clean. I put a small bucket under the filter to catch what came out while removing the filter.
12. Filling with oil is where things got interesting. I put in 5 quarts of 10w30 Quaker State (MP said their manuals are old and need to be updated and to use a good multi-grade oil. The oil cap says 5w30 but MP said to use 10w30).
13. Started the engine, ran a few minutes, saw pressure was good, shut it down, waited, and check the oil. The oil barely showed on the stick.
14. Added another quart, checked the oil, getting higher.
15. Added another quart (#7), checkled oil, getting higher.
16. Decided to check how much was sucked out. I filled up the 5 quart jug and almost 3 quart bottles.
17. Checked the oil the next day to allow the oil to drain back into the pan.
18. The oil is now showing up just below hash marks and holes in the dipstick.
19. Back to the store for more oil.
20. Added another quart (#8). Checked oil again, finally in the safe range.
I would never have guessed that the 6.0 needed 8+ quarts to fill the pan and filter.
1. Pulled the drain hose through the drain hole just above the TAPS plate.
2. Warmed engine for 5 or 10 minutes with the fake-a-lake.
3. Removed the cap off the drain hose (added a piece of clear hose to get it to clear the TAPS plate and waited.
4. And waited.
5. And waited.
6. Finally the oil began to flow but way to slow.
7. Hookup up an old RV water pump I found in the shop to a 12 volt battery and connected it to the drain line and sucked out the oil in less than 3 minutes.
8. Put the cap on the drain line and pushed it back through the drain and put the plug in the hull.
9. Secured the drain line inside the bilge area.
10. Changed the oil filter (Fram PH8A is what was on it)
11. Since the 6.0 filter is high on the engine, changing the filter was simple and clean. I put a small bucket under the filter to catch what came out while removing the filter.
12. Filling with oil is where things got interesting. I put in 5 quarts of 10w30 Quaker State (MP said their manuals are old and need to be updated and to use a good multi-grade oil. The oil cap says 5w30 but MP said to use 10w30).
13. Started the engine, ran a few minutes, saw pressure was good, shut it down, waited, and check the oil. The oil barely showed on the stick.
14. Added another quart, checked the oil, getting higher.
15. Added another quart (#7), checkled oil, getting higher.
16. Decided to check how much was sucked out. I filled up the 5 quart jug and almost 3 quart bottles.
17. Checked the oil the next day to allow the oil to drain back into the pan.
18. The oil is now showing up just below hash marks and holes in the dipstick.
19. Back to the store for more oil.
20. Added another quart (#8). Checked oil again, finally in the safe range.
I would never have guessed that the 6.0 needed 8+ quarts to fill the pan and filter.
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