I mistakenly used oil designed for gas engines when I did my oil change. Do I need to drain it and add the proper oil or could I get through the summer with thie oil? Also does anyone know if there are oil additives that would help this situation?
Oil is cheap compared engine repair!!!I mistakenly used oil designed for gas engines when I did my oil change. Do I need to drain it and add the proper oil or could I get through the summer with thie oil? Also does anyone know if there are oil additives that would help this situation?
I mistakenly used oil designed for gas engines when I did my oil change. Do I need to drain it and add the proper oil or could I get through the summer with thie oil? Also does anyone know if there are oil additives that would help this situation?
The difference between gasoline and diesel engine oils is primarily the additiives used in them. Gasoline automobiles often use catalytic converters that become contaminated with the higher concentrations of certain extreme pressure additives used in diesel oils such as zinc dialkyldithiophosphate (ZDDP).I mistakenly used oil designed for gas engines when I did my oil change. Do I need to drain it and add the proper oil or could I get through the summer with thie oil? Also does anyone know if there are oil additives that would help this situation?
Yeah I researched this quite a bit after my frustrating screw up. I will change out the oil and consider my mistake an engine flush. For an extra few bucks and a little time at least I will have peace of mind.The difference between gasoline and diesel engine oils is primarily the additiives used in them. Gasoline automobiles often use catalytic converters that become contaminated with the higher concentrations of certain extreme pressure additives used in diesel oils such as zinc dialkyldithiophosphate (ZDDP).
The base stocks are otherwise the same. If you wish to continue to use the gasoline-engine oil you can add a can of STP Oil Treatment (Or WalMart’s copy “supertech” oil treatment) ....the “secret” ingredient in both being ZDDP. But if your tractor is still under warranty it’d be best to drain it out an replace it.
Yes but I doubt I will need a new one.ummm.. did you also change the oil filter ??
I did say It was bit OCD Its something Ive just always done, while the drain pan is there and its all opened up, Pour a little fresh oil in and watch it come out. I'm not talking a gallon or anything, just a half a quart or so. I've done this with all my lawn mowers, my 4 wheeler, now tractor. I Just imagine it helping push out any little remnants of the old oil. If you had a bucket full of black oil and drilled a hole in the bottom of the bucket and let it run out, once it stopped dripping you would be left with little remnants of black oil along the bottom of the bucket. Pour a little fresh oil in the bucket and the flow of that new oil rushing toward and out of the hole would help pull more of that old oil out. Once it stopped dripping this 2nd time you would likely be left with mostly brown fresh oil in the bottom instead of black old oil. This is how I think about it. Again, its a little OCD. Typically, the oil I end up using for this OCD move is oil that would end up being excess from the oil change and not used anyways. I always buy 1 quart more than manuals call for just so I have extra. I find that I rarely am able to put exactly what a manual calls for in an engine. If it calls for 4 quarts, Its rare to put exactly 4 quarts in and be at the perfect fill level. Always a tad more or tad less or something, so I get left with a bottle of opened oil that has a little in it and sits on a shelf and gets old. Many times I have taken these half full bottles of oil left over from previous changes and used it as my "OCD flush" oil. It may be a year old, but still nice and brown, and serves the purpose to flush.If you think you may flush out some misc. particles by adding some oil and letting it drip, indicates you do not think the oil filter is doing it's job. The amount of oil in a small engine will not effect the remaining volume of oil.
Now, flushing a housing that has no filter can be effective in removing misc laying on the bottom.
I am doing this by mistake. I get a complete engine flush. lolI did say It was bit OCD Its something Ive just always done, while the drain pan is there and its all opened up, Pour a little fresh oil in and watch it come out. I'm not talking a gallon or anything, just a half a quart or so. I've done this with all my lawn mowers, my 4 wheeler, now tractor. I Just imagine it helping push out any little remnants of the old oil. If you had a bucket full of black oil and drilled a hole in the bottom of the bucket and let it run out, once it stopped dripping you would be left with little remnants of black oil along the bottom of the bucket. Pour a little fresh oil in the bucket and the flow of that new oil rushing toward and out of the hole would help pull more of that old oil out. Once it stopped dripping this 2nd time you would likely be left with mostly brown fresh oil in the bottom instead of black old oil. This is how I think about it. Again, its a little OCD. Typically, the oil I end up using for this OCD move is oil that would end up being excess from the oil change and not used anyways. I always buy 1 quart more than manuals call for just so I have extra. I find that I rarely am able to put exactly what a manual calls for in an engine. If it calls for 4 quarts, Its rare to put exactly 4 quarts in and be at the perfect fill level. Always a tad more or tad less or something, so I get left with a bottle of opened oil that has a little in it and sits on a shelf and gets old. Many times I have taken these half full bottles of oil left over from previous changes and used it as my "OCD flush" oil. It may be a year old, but still nice and brown, and serves the purpose to flush.
Oh I though my L3800 was on my avatar but obviously it is not (it is now). I got probably the last L3800 in my area before they went to the newer models with all of the emissions stuff. The new ones were already out but there was one L3800 somewhere at another dealership and they shipped it to my dealership. This was in 2014.Quazz, it is not evident from your original post what kind of tractor you have. If you have one of the newer ones with a dpf filter, your level of ocd should go up, and you should check manual for correct oil types. Contaminating the dpf could get expensive.
That’s fine... nothing to worry about....
I put the Rotella in today but not a new filter....