I know I've seen a bunch of creative rigs to capture the remnants of empty motor oil bottles, but a search proved useless. Can you please post your rigs for capturing the last few drops of motor oil from you empty bottles?
Thanks
Thanks
When I was a kid in my fathers garage he had an old fan belt rack to place the cans on. Below the rack was an angled trough that fed into a barrel. We sold the oil at the pumps for less than the regular price in those old time glass bottles in the wire rack.
shop dirt, grinding dust, etc. that settled into the trough would also be added to the mix?shop dirt, grinding dust, etc. that settled into the trough would also be added to the mix?
When I was a kid in my fathers garage he had an old fan belt rack to place the cans on. Below the rack was an angled trough that fed into a barrel. We sold the oil at the pumps for less than the regular price in those old time glass bottles in the wire rack.
shop dirt, grinding dust, etc. that settled into the trough would also be added to the mix?
you must be on the young side ....its used oil for a tired old car...cheap and it saved people money ... wont make things much worse..
There are precisely 627,891 different products that accomplish the task perfectly well. Just type the phrases into a search engine, click images, and view the options for purchase.
No need to bother wasting time making something when for $20-$30 you can get something made in the USA, support manufacturing, and just have something that works right out of the gate...
One example is the B.O.B.oil recovery system. Twenty bucks. Another interesting toy is the funnel bracket that drains into a spare bottle, which you can then pour into a recovery system.
The market is full of this sort of thing.
B.O.B. is another open trough design.... "works right out of the gate" Yeah, not so much....
Ya'll must have some surgically clean shops if you're ok with dumping oil that has been sitting in an uncovered container into a perfectly good engine.
shop dirt, grinding dust, etc. that settled into the trough would also be added to the mix?
Not worth doing.
I only change oil once a year....if that.
And I spill more than I would save, on the exhaust header, when filling.
Bill
Not worth doing.
I only change oil once a year....if that.
And I spill more than I would save, on the exhaust header, when filling.
Bill
I am 55.. so yeah, pretty young.
I do a fair amount of fabrication / welding / grinding in my shop, and that filth gets into everything that isn't covered. No way I'd want to pour motor oil into any engine that has metal shavings in it....
B.O.B. is another open trough design.... "works right out of the gate" Yeah, not so much....
Ya'll must have some surgically clean shops if you're ok with dumping oil that has been sitting in an uncovered container into a perfectly good engine.
so, in short, you really don't have anything to offer to further this discussion.
gotcha.![]()
A quite a few is relative and subjective, I have 25 or 30 engines and don't think its worth it.I have 3-cars and two motorcycles so I'm doing quite a few changes each year. So to me it is worth doing.
I was looking into this a while ago and on here I saw the following images. I can't remember who they belong to and what thread I saw them in but I liked there style. Complements to the designers.
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That's pretty cool. IDK if I'd padlock it, though. It would be pretty funny if all the tools the guy who built that owns were out in the open on a pegboard...
Tommy
It solves one mystery... I think that is the secret lab where they make Super Tech oil.That's pretty cool. IDK if I'd padlock it, though. It would be pretty funny if all the tools the guy who built that owns were out in the open on a pegboard...
Tommy
Like that idea!http://www.bob2000.com/
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008LFKZ9W/?tag=atomicindus08-20
Done.
Or you can buy 2" DWV PVC, drill 5 or 6 holes the right size, mount it on a wall on an angle sloped towards a funnel stuck in another empty oil jug.
Tommy
When I worked around my local "Imperial Esso Station" in the 50/60's we had a wall rack that looked very much like the one in the picture. One could be easily duplicated by the average DIYer.
Today I use oil from 4 or 5 litre jugs that I invert into a twenty litre jug that just sits there with enough ballast (oil) in it to keep it upright. Don't do too much of that these days.
AgreedI pick one bottle and I put a funnel in it and I take the other bottles and one at a time I place them upside down in the funnel allowing the oil to drain into the bottle collecting any oil left in the bottle.
set a funnel in a jar or a can, or whatever your're collecting into, put the bottle upside down in the funnel.... if youre worried about dust throw a grocery bag over it
