Draining Transmission Case - How Catch Fluid?

   / Draining Transmission Case - How Catch Fluid? #11  
I am doing the same thing this weekend to my 3130 and the idea of cutting a 55 gal drum is one I have never thought of. I have two barrells rusting away behind the shop, I think I just might chop 'em off and used them as the drain pan. This forum is great for ideas just like this.
 
   / Draining Transmission Case - How Catch Fluid? #12  
Mr. safety chimes in:
Be very carefull if that drum ever had oil or anything like it in it.
A guy up the road was killed when cutting the end out of a somewhat larger oil tank that had been open for better than 20 years.
 
   / Draining Transmission Case - How Catch Fluid? #13  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Jhb has it right… ‘Its like free fuel!’ … and you are right, if you don’t add any dirt while you drain, it is already filtered.

)</font>
If its to dirty to run in your Hydro doesn't it naturally follow that it's also to dirty to run in your engine?

web page Kubota and Biodiesel
 
   / Draining Transmission Case - How Catch Fluid? #14  
Here's what worked for the 5 gallon transmission on my tractor:

My wife buys kitty litter in 3.5 gallon jugs with a wide mouth. I put two of them in my large galvanized drain pan. They are nearly tall enough to reach the drain plug, no funnel needed.

For changing oil I wear blue oil-resistant disposable gloves.

It was easy to put my gloved finger over the drain to stop the oil while I moved the second jug under the drain. A little oil dripped in the galvanized pan.

I also have a 30" x 48" galvanized drip pan under the whole project to avoid staining the shop floor.
 
   / Draining Transmission Case - How Catch Fluid? #15  
Are you changing your hydraulic oil because it’s too dirty /forums/images/graemlins/crazy.gif???? If you ever have to for that reason you have some serious contamination problem.
Most hydraulic oil is changed because the additive packages are running near their expected life… the additives needed to keep diesel stable and flowing are not an issue in a summer mix of clean hydraulic oil and diesel.
If your hydraulic oil could cause any problems with your diesel injectors or pump you are running oil with no filtration and heavy contamination in your hydro system. What can you imagine clean but used hydro fluid could have in it? Diesel fuel is FAR from pure… it has all kinds of ‘bad’ things introduced from shipping/storage and end user handling.
Detergents/stabilizers are added to all oils and fuels to help, but even under the best of conditions even water can end up in your fuel. Your injector system is not quite as fragile and unforgiving as you may think. But … I don’t think you could run a steady diet of used motor oil with your fuel. Carbon is rather abrasive; you should not have any carbon in your hydro fluid /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif. KennyV.
 

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