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- Banned
- #16
I did my engine flush today, along with my oil change, engine oil filter, cabin air filter, and engine air filter. I don't have AC and I'm not about to start using the heater and 90° Texas weather, but I figured keeping a standard number of miles between the cabin air filter would be a smart choice for the long run. It's a K&N cabin air filter so it was just cleaning it and sticking it back in.
I didn't take any photos because why really, and also because I couldn't find my phone all morning because my granddaughter hit it in her toy chest because God hates me!
Anyways, the Jeep sounds fine, after the engine flush. Literally poured in the whole bottle, let the vehicle idle for 10 minutes and then drained all the oil. I got to say the oil comes out a whole lot quicker when you drain it immediately after turning the vehicle off rather than waiting 45 minutes for the engine to cool down.
I might start draining the oil from the Wrangler from this point forward while it's still super hot.
I always put exactly nine quarts into the Wrangler, but I yanked out about 10 quarts of oil. Now I only added 16 oz (0.5 quarts) of engine flush. I don't have any proof, I'm not about to dump out my dirty oil canisters, but I'm fairly certain that extra half a quart of oil beyond the 16 oz of flush was displacement from engine sludge. At least that's my best guess.
Either that or there's a band of criminals out there topping off people's oil in the dead of night!
Only 40,000 mi in, my Wrangler. It actually sounds quieter idling after this last oil change then it has before I started the oil change. I think I'm going to keep doing these engine flushes every 40,000 mi until my engine dies or the flushes start causing issues.
If you look online what negative side effects of engine flushes are, they are that if you have bad gaskets, the sludge that may be protecting the leak will be taken away and the bad gasket will be exposed with a new leak. However if I'm practicing this early on instead of at the end of the engines life cycle, I might be correct to assume that a bad gasket will present itself before a last minute engine flush would.
Basically I'm going to keep doing engine flushes every 40K miles.
Happy Father's Day everybody!
I didn't take any photos because why really, and also because I couldn't find my phone all morning because my granddaughter hit it in her toy chest because God hates me!
Anyways, the Jeep sounds fine, after the engine flush. Literally poured in the whole bottle, let the vehicle idle for 10 minutes and then drained all the oil. I got to say the oil comes out a whole lot quicker when you drain it immediately after turning the vehicle off rather than waiting 45 minutes for the engine to cool down.
I might start draining the oil from the Wrangler from this point forward while it's still super hot.
I always put exactly nine quarts into the Wrangler, but I yanked out about 10 quarts of oil. Now I only added 16 oz (0.5 quarts) of engine flush. I don't have any proof, I'm not about to dump out my dirty oil canisters, but I'm fairly certain that extra half a quart of oil beyond the 16 oz of flush was displacement from engine sludge. At least that's my best guess.
Either that or there's a band of criminals out there topping off people's oil in the dead of night!
Only 40,000 mi in, my Wrangler. It actually sounds quieter idling after this last oil change then it has before I started the oil change. I think I'm going to keep doing these engine flushes every 40,000 mi until my engine dies or the flushes start causing issues.
If you look online what negative side effects of engine flushes are, they are that if you have bad gaskets, the sludge that may be protecting the leak will be taken away and the bad gasket will be exposed with a new leak. However if I'm practicing this early on instead of at the end of the engines life cycle, I might be correct to assume that a bad gasket will present itself before a last minute engine flush would.
Basically I'm going to keep doing engine flushes every 40K miles.
Happy Father's Day everybody!
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