After hearing what the GM preluber cost ($170), I got motivated to build something of my own.
Start with $9 cheapy garden sprayer, add spool of 1/4" clear tubing ($2) and a 1/4" x 1/4" hose barb ($2) and wallla....homemade engine preluber for all of $13!
The sprayer uses its own in-tank pickup, but I changed the black plastic hose/valve with the clear tube. It plugged right into the barbed fitting that screws into the tank. I only used about 3 feet of the clear hose out of the 10ft in the spool.
I unscrewed the front oil galley plug and screwed the hose barb right in. Thought for sure the galley was metric threads, but that wasnt the case. The fitting did not leak whatsoever.
The 15w40 oil started flowing the minute I began pumping. We just had to pump the tank up a few times as the oil level dropped, but that was to be expected. I figure it took roughly 20 minutes to put all 10q in.
Sorry for the phone pics.
Start with $9 cheapy garden sprayer, add spool of 1/4" clear tubing ($2) and a 1/4" x 1/4" hose barb ($2) and wallla....homemade engine preluber for all of $13!
The sprayer uses its own in-tank pickup, but I changed the black plastic hose/valve with the clear tube. It plugged right into the barbed fitting that screws into the tank. I only used about 3 feet of the clear hose out of the 10ft in the spool.
I unscrewed the front oil galley plug and screwed the hose barb right in. Thought for sure the galley was metric threads, but that wasnt the case. The fitting did not leak whatsoever.
The 15w40 oil started flowing the minute I began pumping. We just had to pump the tank up a few times as the oil level dropped, but that was to be expected. I figure it took roughly 20 minutes to put all 10q in.
Sorry for the phone pics.
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