The curious case of the missing sump plug
The curious case of the missing sump plug
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Discussion

eltax91

Original Poster:

10,625 posts

229 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
Hi all

I woke up this morning, looked out of the windows and saw the nice bright weather and thought to myself it was high time I got that wheel bearing sorted on the landy, and whilst I am at it, I will drop the oil and sort the filter i've had in the boot for ages. smile

So, brew in hand I settled to getting the wheel off, tt the fk out of the two caliper bolts until they are rounded off and will no longer move. frown As I gave up with that, thinking I will leave it to my friendly local mechanic I made the silly mistake of thinking, well, that's all my bad luck out of the way....

So, I dropped the oil, and sure as eggs is eggs, as ever, I dropped the bloody sump plug into approx 6 litres of oil in my drain pan. rage Never, mind, I shal retrieve it later.

Only I fking can't can i? It's fking vanished... Where the hell it has gone I have no idea. After 20 mins fishing around I searched all the stones under the car, shook all the blankets out and then drained the oil through a sieve into the container....

Why is it that every god dam fking job has to have something so stupid stop it from finishing? And how can a sump plug just vanish? Is this part of the joys of DIY mechanics?

So, new plug on order from flea bay, and I have a nice decorative land rover on the front drive at the MiL now... hehe

beer

mybrainhurts

90,809 posts

278 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
Before embarking on this task again...

Check the garden for sump plug goblins...

Little bastids, they are...


saaby93

32,038 posts

201 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
thumbup

Larry Dickman

3,762 posts

241 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
eltax91 said:
So, brew in hand I settled to getting the wheel off, tt the fk out of the two caliper bolts until they are rounded off and will no longer move.
Bad luck & all that but how did you do that, Torx bolts maybe?

Dunk76

4,350 posts

237 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
Tip 1: Caliper bolts - tap/hit the face of them with a technical adjuster to break the stiction/rust apart before trying to undo them. Next time don't wind them in so tight wink

Tip 2: Always buy a new sump plug and washer before commencing oil change. Simply drive car until conveniently warm, find a large storm drain and straddle kerb over drain (saves jacking up), empty sump into drain, fling old filter in hedge/random garden. Push car back slightly (to avoid any oil which missed the drain) and refit/refill.

John D.

20,271 posts

232 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
Dunk76 said:
Tip 2: Always buy a new sump plug and washer before commencing oil change. Simply drive car until conveniently warm, find a large storm drain and straddle kerb over drain (saves jacking up), empty sump into drain, fling old filter in hedge/random garden. Push car back slightly (to avoid any oil which missed the drain) and refit/refill.
I hope this is a joke.

Speed_Demon

2,662 posts

211 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
It's always on the engine cover... ALWAYS hehe

mybrainhurts

90,809 posts

278 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
John D. said:
Dunk76 said:
Tip 2: Always buy a new sump plug and washer before commencing oil change. Simply drive car until conveniently warm, find a large storm drain and straddle kerb over drain (saves jacking up), empty sump into drain, fling old filter in hedge/random garden. Push car back slightly (to avoid any oil which missed the drain) and refit/refill.
I hope this is a joke.
Might be, might not....rofl

thinfourth2

32,414 posts

227 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
Dunk76 said:
Tip 1: Caliper bolts - tap/hit the face of them with a technical adjuster to break the stiction/rust apart before trying to undo them. Next time don't wind them in so tight wink
.
1/2inch 12 point socket and a BIG hammer

wildman0609

885 posts

199 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
if you leave them in the oil it will dissolve. wink

acf8181

797 posts

257 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
Meant in the nicest possible, but are you sure you're cut out for mechanical work?!

Dunk76

4,350 posts

237 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
mybrainhurts said:
John D. said:
Dunk76 said:
Tip 2: Always buy a new sump plug and washer before commencing oil change. Simply drive car until conveniently warm, find a large storm drain and straddle kerb over drain (saves jacking up), empty sump into drain, fling old filter in hedge/random garden. Push car back slightly (to avoid any oil which missed the drain) and refit/refill.
I hope this is a joke.
Might be, might not....rofl
rolleyes

If you happen to live near some sort of ecomentalist, don't forget to pour a couple of cups of washing detergent down the drain afterwards to help break it up.


Dunk76

4,350 posts

237 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
thinfourth2 said:
Dunk76 said:
Tip 1: Caliper bolts - tap/hit the face of them with a technical adjuster to break the stiction/rust apart before trying to undo them. Next time don't wind them in so tight wink
.
1/2inch 12 point socket and a BIG hammer
smile


Jonny671

29,778 posts

212 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
Dunk76 said:
mybrainhurts said:
John D. said:
Dunk76 said:
Tip 2: Always buy a new sump plug and washer before commencing oil change. Simply drive car until conveniently warm, find a large storm drain and straddle kerb over drain (saves jacking up), empty sump into drain, fling old filter in hedge/random garden. Push car back slightly (to avoid any oil which missed the drain) and refit/refill.
I hope this is a joke.
Might be, might not....rofl
rolleyes

If you happen to live near some sort of ecomentalist, don't forget to pour a couple of cups of washing detergent down the drain afterwards to help break it up.
Excellent! hehe

Didn't OP know they dissolve when in contact with oil?

pinchmeimdreamin

10,742 posts

241 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
OP have you looked in the socket you used to undo it wink

masermartin

1,649 posts

200 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
eltax91 said:
Why is it that every god dam fking job has to have something so stupid stop it from finishing? And how can a sump plug just vanish? Is this part of the joys of DIY mechanics?
LOL, I know the feeling well!

As an aside - get a magnet for next time? wink

Cost Captain

3,920 posts

203 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
John D. said:
Dunk76 said:
Tip 2: Always buy a new sump plug and washer before commencing oil change. Simply drive car until conveniently warm, find a large storm drain and straddle kerb over drain (saves jacking up), empty sump into drain, fling old filter in hedge/random garden. Push car back slightly (to avoid any oil which missed the drain) and refit/refill.
I hope this is a joke.
I hope this isn't a joke! Would make me feel better about doing the same with anti freeze

RobCrezz

7,892 posts

231 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
Dunk76 said:
mybrainhurts said:
John D. said:
Dunk76 said:
Tip 2: Always buy a new sump plug and washer before commencing oil change. Simply drive car until conveniently warm, find a large storm drain and straddle kerb over drain (saves jacking up), empty sump into drain, fling old filter in hedge/random garden. Push car back slightly (to avoid any oil which missed the drain) and refit/refill.
I hope this is a joke.
Might be, might not....rofl
rolleyes

If you happen to live near some sort of ecomentalist, don't forget to pour a couple of cups of washing detergent down the drain afterwards to help break it up.
biggrin

redstu

2,287 posts

262 months

Sunday 24th October 2010
quotequote all
Cost Captain said:
John D. said:
Dunk76 said:
Tip 2: Always buy a new sump plug and washer before commencing oil change. Simply drive car until conveniently warm, find a large storm drain and straddle kerb over drain (saves jacking up), empty sump into drain, fling old filter in hedge/random garden. Push car back slightly (to avoid any oil which missed the drain) and refit/refill.
I hope this is a joke.
I hope this isn't a joke! Would make me feel better about doing the same with anti freeze
antifreeze breaks down apparently, so not the same sort of problem.
I used to have a lockup garage in a group of 15 , the drain cover was always sticky with oil.

P_J_R

252 posts

228 months

Monday 25th October 2010
quotequote all
Dunk76 said:
Tip 1: Caliper bolts - tap/hit the face of them with a technical adjuster to break the stiction/rust apart before trying to undo them. Next time don't wind them in so tight wink

Tip 2: Always buy a new sump plug and washer before commencing oil change. Simply drive car until conveniently warm, find a large storm drain and straddle kerb over drain (saves jacking up), empty sump into drain, fling old filter in hedge/random garden. Push car back slightly (to avoid any oil which missed the drain) and refit/refill.
rofl just got to mop up the tea from my keyboard