Remote Oil Filter Adapter Leaking
#1
Remote Oil Filter Adapter Leaking
Hello all,
I have a 98 S10 Blazer 4wd, just replaced the v-6 engine, I have an oil leak at the remote filter adapter at the engine, does anybody have a good diagram of the gaskets and o-rings that are used on that. and the order that they go in.
Thank you, great site, has been very helpful with some odd problems with my blazer
I have a 98 S10 Blazer 4wd, just replaced the v-6 engine, I have an oil leak at the remote filter adapter at the engine, does anybody have a good diagram of the gaskets and o-rings that are used on that. and the order that they go in.
Thank you, great site, has been very helpful with some odd problems with my blazer
#2
Just do yourself a favor & eliminate all the oil cooler line crap. I was having the same problem on all 3 of my s10 vehicles. Go to your local dealership & order & order the 2wd nipple, it will thread directly to the block, then you can use a dodge neon filter. The part # 14081300 is less than $10 at dealership. I have done this on all of my vehicles with no ill effects, Good Luck.
#4
yep,ripe the lines and adapter off,or disconnect the lines and pull em back. pull the 2 10mm bolts off the adapter and scrap the gasket off..reinsert the threaded nipple into the block, then buy the wix 51036 and put it on. and roll!
oil cooler? yes you need it if you are pulling 5k+ all the time. ive been beating the poo out of mine without it for 15k miles now. no issues.
oil cooler? yes you need it if you are pulling 5k+ all the time. ive been beating the poo out of mine without it for 15k miles now. no issues.
#5
2nd gen 4X4s
Your suggestion must be for later model 2 wheel drive Blazers. Mine is a 99 4X4 and I'm trying to find a way to take the adapter off of the block to fix the oil leak. GM put the adapter on these because the differential housing almost contacts the block in that area. Is there a way to get the adapter off without lowering the front differential????
#6
Yup loosen the motor mount and jack the motor up! The adapter works on 4wd vehicles just fine. I just cut the old lines out rather than removing them in one piece. They were garbage anyway so no point in being gentle with them!
#8
yeah I personally like not having to lay on my back under the center of the truck just to change the filter lol but that's just me I guess...
I had a buddy of mine replace the adapter O-rings on the block for me, just because I was feeling lazy and he was willing to do it for $20 :P he works on cars as a side job... Now my lines are leaking, not terribly, but enough to be noticeable, and it's on my to-do list to replace those lines...
I had a buddy of mine replace the adapter O-rings on the block for me, just because I was feeling lazy and he was willing to do it for $20 :P he works on cars as a side job... Now my lines are leaking, not terribly, but enough to be noticeable, and it's on my to-do list to replace those lines...
#9
I replaced my lines about 3 years ago with Dorman lines. It was a bad idea, they started leaking again after about 6 months. They leak worse than my old ones did. What I was thinking of doing was grabbing a set of stockers and taking them to a hydraulics shop and see how much they would charge me to replace the rubber lines with something heavy duty.
#10
I use the acdelco pf47 filter. To change filter I have to lift up on left side of oil pan so it will clear diff and yoke. I do have the RC 2inch lift kit installed so not sure if that makes it work clearing things. Id say as long as your using a synthetic oil there's no need for the cooler.