Oil Change [Drain Nut]

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by f00-bar, Oct 5, 2004.

  1. f00-bar

    f00-bar Guest

    I have 03 Accord EX Coupe, and I was trying to do my own oil
    change a few weeks back. First time doing-it-myself on this
    car....

    But for the life of me, I couldn't budge the drain plug nut.

    Anyone have a tip or two? I used a ramp to drive the car
    up and slid underneath. I can get the filter off after using
    semi force with the filter-wrench.

    I am guessing I need more elbow room to turn the nut on the
    drain hole.

    I had a big (stronger) friend who went underneath and tried
    to turn the nut, and no go.

    Thanks.
     
    f00-bar, Oct 5, 2004
    #1
  2. f00-bar

    Caroline Guest

    Are you absolutely sure you're turning the drain plug nut in the correct
    direction?

    As you lie on the ground looking up, you should turn it COUNTER clockwise to
    loosen it.

    Maybe spray with PB Blaster, wait ten minutes, and try again. PB Blaster is the
    best penetrating oil available. IIRC it's under $5 a can at Wal-Mart.

    Also, buy a piece of pipe at Home Depot that fits over the end of your ratchet
    wrench handle. Any stiff pipe, metal or not (PVC maybe?), should do.

    I have a lot of old pipe lying around for this purpose. Typically I default to
    my 2-foot long cast iron or steel pipe, super thick pipe, but I have used some
    PVC pipe and a five-foot length of fence post pipe (for my 91 Civic's crankshaft
    pulley bolt) to provide an extension.

    If you truly have been turning the nut in the correct direction, I'd be darned
    worried the last person to install the nut overtorqued it and may have stripped
    threads. It's kind of a flimsy fitting. People do tend to overtorque the nut,
    but not to the point that it cannot be freed, from my readings here.

    Updates welcome.
     
    Caroline, Oct 5, 2004
    #2
  3. f00-bar

    twaugh5 Guest

    An old trick -- using a box spanner, put pressure on the nut and then tap
    the center of the nut sharply with a hammer. That sometimes will break it
    loose. Used to work well on motorcycles when removing steel plugs from pot
    metal pans.
     
    twaugh5, Oct 6, 2004
    #3
  4. f00-bar

    C B George Guest


    Not to sound like I work for OSHA, but I would suggest using a breaker bar
    or appropriately larger wrench than using a pipe as a wrench extension.
    Hand tools are only designed for so much torque and applying too much
    pressure through an extension can lead to breaking the wrench or personal
    injuries.
     
    C B George, Oct 6, 2004
    #4
  5. f00-bar

    Caroline Guest

    I and many others have used pipe extensions for decades to no detriment.

    One should be careful doing anything.
     
    Caroline, Oct 6, 2004
    #5
Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments (here). After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.