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Old 03-13-2007, 08:05 AM   #1
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As an inveterate MB fan I too like the oil extraction method that is employed. I could literally change oil and filter on my diesel MB's in a jacket and tie. No muss no fuss.

But be careful out there! I once tried to use my oil extractor on one of my Fords, the dipstick tube passes very close to the exhaust manifold. Luckily I pulled the extractor tube out before it melted inside my dipstick tube.
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Old 03-13-2007, 08:14 AM   #2
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Thanks. I think access via for the oil extraction tool via the oil fill tube is limited because it takes a hard turn on the newer Boxsters. Anybody else had any experience here.
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Old 03-13-2007, 09:12 AM   #3
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Quote:
Originally Posted by fcohen12
Thanks. I think access via for the oil extraction tool via the oil fill tube is limited because it takes a hard turn on the newer Boxsters. Anybody else had any experience here.
Hi,

Before taking the plunge on an extractor, buy 3-4' of Nylon Surgical Tubing and see if you can get it into the Sump from the Filler Tube. Cutting the end at an angle might help get it past any bend.

Personally, since the Cartridge Filter is not accesible from the Top of the Engine, I don't think it's that big a deal to simply drain the Oil from the Sump for an Oil change, but for accidental overfill, it would be more convenient. Hope this helps...

Happy Motoring!... Jim'99
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Old 03-13-2007, 09:47 AM   #4
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Thanks. I'll look into the surgical tubing.

Both the Porsche dealerships are 40-50 miles from my home plus scheduling and wait.

The real kicker here is that I am spending $200 at an alternate Porsche dealer to do LOF at a 5000 mile interval (vs 20,000 spec) for a warm fuzzy that my car is in top shape.

After this LOF, this dealer tells me their policy is to simply add 9 qts vs the 8.2 quart spec /with filter changeout. This is showing overfill on my electronic register.

By contrast, my original servicing dealer's policy is to add only 8 quarts followed by any additional oil after the engine is run and the oil level checked.
They're concerned that some oil may stay in the system making it .8 qts overage plus the unaccounted for residual engine oil.

This is why a simple way (extractor) to remove any oil overfill seems like an attractive idea.
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