teamextreme
Well-known member
It's one of those urban legends that has some truth to it that no one understands. Changing the oil while hot does remove more of the dirt and contaminants, because the sediment/particulates that would normally settle on horizontal surfaces is reabsorbed into the moving 200°f oil.
Unfortunately, that's just a secondary benefit. The real reason you change your oil hot instead of ice cold is because you want every surface of every moving part coated in a thin layer of oil before you drain it. Otherwise you're starting your engine effectively dry (it takes about 1-2 full seconds to fill an empty oil filter housing, during which time you have zero oil pressure).
Are you driving vehicles with no oil filters? You claim sediment/particulates will be put into suspension in hot oil. True, if you didn't have a filter, which is trapping all those things.
On the secondary benefit, you're claiming that a hot oil change will keep oil on the engine parts for when you start it next. That makes no sense at all. Ignore doing any kind of oil change, what is happening every time you start a cold engine? The same scenario you are describing. Yes, all the oil has run down into the pan, and yes it's the hardest time on an engine, but doing a cold oil change has no effect on that, you would have started it cold next time weather you changed the oil or not.

