Oil sampling - tubing recommendation

Gin

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 12, 2012
Messages
874
Fluid Motion Model
R-31 S
Vessel Name
Echo II (2019)
Last week I weighed in on a thread about oil sample pumps and lamented the difficulty I have getting the tubing from the sample pump tubing into the oil sump. My frustration appears to be shared by others. Although I’ve had success using 1/4” line, it has been a challenge each time.

Today, though, I discovered the holy grail solution for sampling the D4’s oil: IV tubing.

I happened to have it from a Christmas tree watering system we no longer use. I grabbed it this morning and took it to the boat, wondering if it would work. The tubing is fairly soft and small in diameter. I thought it might be too flexible to thread down the dipstick tube. I also wondered if it would collapse with suction — diesel oil is thick, even fully warmed up (which I do for my samples). But I thought, what the heck, I’ll give it a try.

It was magic. The compression knob on the top of the pump clamped down fine on the IV line (I wasn’t sure if it would collapse the line). I then fed the IV line down the dipstick tub, and it went down like “buttah.” No jamming. No having to to coax and manipulate it into the sump. I never did feel any resistance. Once I was sure I had ample IV line in, I tried the pump. I felt suction right away, and a couple of seconds later up came the oil. The flow was a little slower than with the wider tubing, but it worked great. From the time I opened the engine hatch to when I capped my sample bottle took at most 5 minutes. And zero mess.

I’m not sure where to get IV line. I just happened to have some. Amazon has tubing that is used for oxygen and things like wine/beer making. The sizes look like they might work. For reference, my IV line has an OD of about 3/16” and an ID of about 1/8”.

Hope others find this helpful.

My next step is to send the engine and transmission oil samples to Blackstone Labs. I’m nerdy enough to love all the info they give me on the oil samples.

Gini
 
Gin,

I tried to cut and paste an interesting video…. Unable.

Google this : Vimeo Steve D’Antonio oil analysis.

A lot of great info.
 
Will do Tom. I've stumbled on some of Steve D'Antonio's articles before. Haven't seen the video on oil analysis. I'll hunt it down. Thanks.

Gini

Postscript: I've now watched the video. Here's the link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQqmtnxXMcA
Excellent info. Steve is exacting in how he takes the sample. Turns out my basic way of sampling is good. But maybe not my sample from yesterday, taken with the IV line. Steve marks the tubing to be just slightly longer than the dipstick itself, to ensure that the sample doesn't come off the very bottom of the sump (where accumulated crud may be). With the IV line, the tubing slid in so effortlessly that I might have drawn from the bottom or near the bottom of the sump. I'm going to send the sample in and let Blackstone know. If nothing else, I'm curious. Because I've done the samples regularly, I have good historical trend for comparison. If this sample ends up looking too out of whack relative to my past samples, I'll do a second one. (That was another good tip from Steve -- if there are issues with the results, consider a do-over.) Thanks again for the tip on the video Tom.
 
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