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Old 02-14-2010, 07:21 PM
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Got yer hat on again huh?

Apparently Gunner has abandoned his inquiry here. Something we said?
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Old 02-14-2010, 09:05 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ERA Chas View Post
Apparently Gunner has abandoned his inquiry here. Something we said?
I stepped out for dinner with the family - sorry I didn't notify anyone.

I really appreciate all the advice, and I'm not blindly ignoring what anyone is trying to tell me. But I'm the guy with the ground truth here: whether it's technically perfect or not, this engine has been running with this oil level for 6200 miles with absolutely no sign of overfill problems (foaming, burnoff, overheating). Maybe when I do a meticulously calibrated fill next time I'll discover why - but for now I'm good and content to leave it as is.
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Old 02-14-2010, 10:17 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Gunner View Post
I stepped out for dinner with the family - sorry I didn't notify anyone.

I really appreciate all the advice, and I'm not blindly ignoring what anyone is trying to tell me. But I'm the guy with the ground truth here: whether it's technically perfect or not, this engine has been running with this oil level for 6200 miles with absolutely no sign of overfill problems (foaming, burnoff, overheating). Maybe when I do a meticulously calibrated fill next time I'll discover why - but for now I'm good and content to leave it as is.
I've stained a few driveways in my life. Trust me, I know what I'm doing.
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Old 02-14-2010, 07:24 PM
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A thinner fluid will not take as long to heat up as it will absorb heat at a faster rate with each pass over a heat source. thats why a heater systm with an air leak such as a blown head gasket will heat up faster then a good closed systm because air heats faster than water . your thinner oil dosent need as much time to heat up as 50 weight.
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Old 02-14-2010, 07:30 PM
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draining oil if you have to remove oilpan to drain oil your engine builder screwed you really good, all oil pans have a drain plug on side or rear or front of sump. if not get a drill operated pump with plastic hose insert hose in dipstick hole and pump out oil it takes less than 5 minutes change filter replace oil and put dipstick back in drive car check again and your done. let oil drain back down before you think you need to add more.You can also remove pan and have a drain plug welded into pan.
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Old 02-14-2010, 08:55 PM
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Gunner my OP falls in line with what you have. I have wondered about the 20. However with others posting here. It has quieted my concerns. I am thinking some day to change over the oil pump however to a high volume unit.
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Old 02-14-2010, 08:59 PM
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If your pressure is good according to the sort of consensus Patrick posted - which is in line with my general experience with big Ford engines - I wouldn't bother boosting the oil pump capacity. A standard pump (of the PI or CJ level) on a tight engine is plenty. When you go to the high vol/high pressure pumps, you're wasting HP to drive it, risking distributor drive gear shear, and not gaining a whole lot except bragging rights.
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Old 02-14-2010, 09:08 PM
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Point well taken.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Gunner View Post
If your pressure is good according to the sort of consensus Patrick posted - which is in line with my general experience with big Ford engines - I wouldn't bother boosting the oil pump capacity. A standard pump (of the PI or CJ level) on a tight engine is plenty. When you go to the high vol/high pressure pumps, you're wasting HP to drive it, risking distributor drive gear shear, and not gaining a whole lot except bragging rights.
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Old 02-14-2010, 10:21 PM
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I had a trans pan that I thought was well held by one bolt fall on my head. Had about
1/2 quart still in it. Filled my ear!
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Old 02-15-2010, 05:25 AM
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My engine came with what was noted as a 10 qt. Canton oil pan. I fill the oil filter up with one quart, screw it on, and dump the remaining 9 qts. in.
Run the motor, dipstick says, 1/2 qt. down....right in the middle.
No problems so far...just uses a lot of gas when I keep my foot in it.

Bill 55-60 #s of oil pressure. If I recall from my youth, the FE ran 7 qts. stock with a filter.
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Old 02-15-2010, 06:11 AM
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Right, we're not even sure exactly what oil pan it is. But even if he overfills the 15-820 by two quarts, I don't even think it'll really matter. These FEs with HV pumps store an ocean of oil up under the valve covers -- so it's not like the over-abundance of oil stays down in the pan to crest up high and get churned. Remember, Ford's initial solution to the original oil-starvation problem in FEs was to re-calibrate the dip stick to hold one more quart of oil. And to this day, running a HV pump with a stock oil pan is the fastest way to burn up your FE.
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Old 02-15-2010, 06:21 AM
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I had the 10 quart Canton Pan on mine and I would put one quart in the filter and about 9 1/2 in the pan then run the engine and by the time it filled the oil cooler and lines, it would be just a little below the full line. But not enough to worry about as it never got any lower between changes. Once in a while I would blow the old oil out of the cooler and those lines and then I had to add about another 1/2 to 3/4ths quart.

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Old 02-15-2010, 06:33 AM
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Quote:
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These FEs...store an ocean of oil up under the valve covers.
It's also fair to say that they have a tendency to drip an ocean of oil under the pan, too.
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Old 02-15-2010, 06:37 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ERA Chas View Post
And since you asked the question and described your situation, Pat, Doug, John, Fred, Ray and myself have told you that there's a better, safer way.
Morons. Each and every one of them.


Quote:
Originally Posted by RedBarchetta View Post
It's also fair to say that they have a tendency to drip an ocean of oil under the pan, too.
Hmmm, pretty quick on the draw considering how early it is in the morning.
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Old 02-15-2010, 06:55 AM
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Sorry...just feeling giddy after driving my car the entire weekend.
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Old 02-15-2010, 07:01 AM
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Sorry...just feeling giddy after driving my car the entire weekend.
Well, I'm jealous. It's brutal here. The kids have't gone to school since I don't know when, there's feet of snow everywhere, there's no place for the dog to crap, I had to put a wicker basket out for the mail man because he can't even get up to the porch where the mail box is, when you do get off the street idiot pedestrians are walking down the middle of the street, 10' piles of snow on the corners block your vision. It basically just sux.
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Old 02-15-2010, 07:30 AM
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...10' piles of snow on the corners block your vision. It basically just sux.
Yeah, but the bright side is at least the Redskins can't play.
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Old 02-15-2010, 10:25 AM
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So, let me get this straight. I have a 9 quart Aviaid pan, about .75 quart in the oil filter and about .5 quart in the oil cooler lines and I should fill it back up with only 6 quarts in the pan and .75 in the oil filter, thereby leaving my system 2.75 quarts under capacity?

Why is 7 quarts the right number? Why not 6 or 8?
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Old 02-15-2010, 10:28 AM
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Why is 7 quarts the right number? Why not 6 or 8?
Because Chas. says so. If you want to ask intelligent questions, then keep them to yourself.
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Old 02-15-2010, 12:43 PM
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No. Sorry if I didn't make this clear.

Assuming you do not evacuate your entire system:
Drain and refill your pan with 7 qts. Remove your filter and put .75 qt in the new one. You already have .5 qt in your lines, plus at least .5 qt in your cooler. Your system now contains 8.75 qts-at least. Draining a pan leaves maybe 2 pints in the pan unless you lean the car over on the stands. Your cooler may hold more depending on whose it is. My Earls is .5 qt. Where is Euclid when you need him?

C'mon-I said you were a pretty bright guy...
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