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Oil Absorbtion Mat

gto65goat

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 6, 2006
Messages
152
Location
Maryland, USA
My car leaks oil in my driveway. Small leak but annoying.
14 year old Pontiac Grand Prix..$650 to have it fixed.
Mileage, 132K...not sure how much life the car has, but they don't make Pontiacs anymore, and I love it as my daily driver.
Wondering what forum members would suggest to prevent oil stains?
Thank you !!
John
 
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evildky

Well-known member
Joined
May 1, 2005
Messages
773
Location
Louisville, KY
14 years old, so it's an 05? making it a W body. Gm might have shut down pontiac division but the impala used the same underpinnings until 2016 model. The epsilon 2 platform replaced various W body cars starting in 08 and is still in use.

back to the oil leak pigmat is great but if you are worried about staining the driveway or garage a drip pan might be a better choice.
 

Flat-rate

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 21, 2013
Messages
637
Pig mats will blow away. Oil leak is most likely the oil pan gasket, or possibly the rear main seal. Those 3.8's run forever, so it should be worth fixing if the body is not too rusty.
 

bob15

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 8, 2011
Messages
6,863
Location
Northeasten, CT
Pig mats or pig pillows!!

Or go to a thrift shop and buy a cooking/baking pan that will catch the drips.
 
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38Chevy454

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 26, 2006
Messages
4,036
Location
Cincinnati, OH
How bad is the leak? Few drops, I would let it go. More then it may be worth fixing.

As for low-budget, some cardboard, held down with some steel scraps should prevent most of the concrete staining problem.
 

rcktsled

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 28, 2007
Messages
355
Location
909 for Life
I park my leaky car on the street. I am doing the city a favor by conditioning the asphalt with transmission fluid.
 

REDONE

Active member
Joined
Sep 2, 2016
Messages
30
Location
Lakewood, CO
Pigmat is expensive for what it is. I never have a shortage of cardboard boxes so that's what I use. I agree with fixing the leak if you really love your car. It's not like one of my 40 year old jeeps that needs to mark it's territory.:beer:
 

C_F

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Jan 21, 2005
Messages
9,675
Location
Utah...SNOW BLOWS!
I use a piece of scrap MDF board, with the finished side down. I've never had the wind blow it away, and it works great to keep oil drips away from the cement.:thumbup:
 

CN Spots

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 21, 2016
Messages
3,065
Location
NW Mississippi
Piece of plywood, OSB, masonite, cardboard, any old plank, foam board, election sign from your least favorite candidate, carpet, dirt, cookie sheet, old shirt, those piggy things, lid from a 55 gallon drum, stone paver, large piece of unglazed tile...Just about anything will work. You just have to decide if it looks better or worse than an oil stain.

Back when I cared I just poured some of those absorbent grannules on the spot where I parked. Don't use the light weight kind though or it just blows away.
 

sean Buick 76

Well-known member
Joined
May 7, 2013
Messages
3,221
Location
Edmonton Alberta
I use a cookie sheet under my truck as it has a power steering leak that I am not interested in fixing for a while. It does not blow away, it keeps the fluid contained, and it is low cost. My leak is very small, TINY amount of fluid but I want to keep it from staining the driveway.
 
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