I hate to post this, but I hope I am just blind and not thick. I have
rebuilt several engines in my time, from bike to light truck. But this
has me beat.
If somebody can tell me where the darn thing is I would be very
grateful.
> I hate to post this, but I hope I am just blind and not thick. I have
> rebuilt several engines in my time, from bike to light truck. But this
> has me beat.
>
> If somebody can tell me where the darn thing is I would be very
> grateful.
OK
You can only get at it from from underneath. Safely get the car up
enough so you can crawl under and you'll see it back towards the
firewall more on the passenger side in a recess in thebelly plate
OldNick - 03 Apr 2007 14:33 GMT
On 3 Apr 2007 05:51:06 -0700, "Leonardo" <alcamoz@centurytel.net>
wrote stuff
and I replied:
OK. Thanks. I have to admit that I was at the local supplier, and did
not have a lift facility.
I did lie down and have a look, but it sounds like it needs a lift.
TA
I will try again.
>> I hate to post this, but I hope I am just blind and not thick. I have
>> rebuilt several engines in my time, from bike to light truck. But this
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
>enough so you can crawl under and you'll see it back towards the
>firewall more on the passenger side in a recess in thebelly plate
hyundaitech - 03 Apr 2007 22:53 GMT
The oil filter is under the alternator, not by the firewall.
OldNick - 05 Apr 2007 01:08 GMT
On Tue, 03 Apr 2007 17:53:19 -0400, "hyundaitech"
<notpublic@not.public.com> wrote stuff
and I replied:
OK. Thanks. I know the general area to look now. I had looked
underneath, but EW engines are new to me. I was working on my old
man's car (mitsubishi), and the starter motor was riight at the back.
Just did not feel right.
>The oil filter is under the alternator, not by the firewall.
>I hate to post this, but I hope I am just blind and not thick. I have
> rebuilt several engines in my time, from bike to light truck. But this
> has me beat.
>
> If somebody can tell me where the darn thing is I would be very
> grateful.
What you want to do is go to www.hmaservice.com and sign up for a free
account. Then be sure you have the proper picture viewer (see "Site
Requirements") from Adobe. (also free). Then you can not only find the
filter, you will find all sorts of nifty information for a DIY guy.
OldNick - 05 Apr 2007 01:06 GMT
On Tue, 3 Apr 2007 19:29:47 -0400, "Edwin Pawlowski" <esp@snet.net>
wrote stuff
and I replied:
>>I hate to post this, but I hope I am just blind and not thick. I have
>> rebuilt several engines in my time, from bike to light truck. But this
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
>Requirements") from Adobe. (also free). Then you can not only find the
>filter, you will find all sorts of nifty information for a DIY guy.
Thanks Edwin. I will take a look at that!