Difference between revisions of "Gearbox Clutch CVs CV joints drain plug"
m (→Plug Removal) |
m (→Plug Removal) |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
NB. Make sure you can remove your fill plug before you remove the drain plug, or you'll be stuck with a van with an empty gearbox :-( | NB. Make sure you can remove your fill plug before you remove the drain plug, or you'll be stuck with a van with an empty gearbox :-( | ||
This plug was very tight (seized in) and had to be freed up by punching around with a bolt/nut drift to shock it loose, before driving the correct hex plug tool into it | This plug was very tight (seized in) and had to be freed up by punching around with a bolt/nut drift to shock it loose, before driving the correct 17mm hex plug tool into it to finish unscrewing it. A replacement drainplug looks in order! | ||
[[Image:Filler_Plug_Removed_01.jpg]] | [[Image:Filler_Plug_Removed_01.jpg]] |
Revision as of 13:12, 2 May 2009
Plug Removal
douwes:17 mm hex required Just Kampers J11205 on the tools list. If you take a M10 bolt of about 2 cm and you put on that two nuts turned against each other, you have an adaptor you can use with your normal how-do-you-call-it wrench/tool/thingy. I hope you get my drift...
NB. Make sure you can remove your fill plug before you remove the drain plug, or you'll be stuck with a van with an empty gearbox :-(
This plug was very tight (seized in) and had to be freed up by punching around with a bolt/nut drift to shock it loose, before driving the correct 17mm hex plug tool into it to finish unscrewing it. A replacement drainplug looks in order!
File:Filler Plug Removed 01.jpg
Emptying
Refilling
Mocki i use a 1/2 " garden hose about 3ft long and a funnel it fits, pass the hose down frm the engine bay, the funnel sits on the top of the air filter and dribbles the oil in over a period of time not unlike that of having ya tea, or watching the news...
- Tip* warm the oil gently first, it flows better, quicker and dont stink as much - just dont get caught mis using the kitchen appliances.
Magnetic plug fir tree
This is fairly typical of a long service box, no large chunks, nor lots of bronze, but obvious long-term wear.
Better the particles are on the plug than in the oil.