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Oil Pan replacement

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by Taxi/Limo, Feb 10, 2020.

  1. Rebound

    Rebound Senior Member

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    Sure, but on the one hand, you have a bare tap tool made by an unknown Chinese manufacturer. On the other, the Lisle set comes with a very heavy duty drill bit which chases out the old threads and a tap tool with a spring-loaded collar which ensures proper alignment, all from a well known professional tool maker.
     
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  2. jzchen

    jzchen Newbie!

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    The clip does nothing to prevent the cap from being unscrewed. It is there in case the threads fail and the cap pops outwards. In that particular case the clip would hold the cap in place. As you rotate the cap the clip is pushed out of the way by ribs on the cap. Elegant, yet purposeful design...

    moto g(7) power ?
     
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  3. Taxi/Limo

    Taxi/Limo Active Member

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    Is this a M12x1.25 Tap?
    Is this what you mean?
    Time-Sert 1212 M12 x 1.25 Metric Thread Repair Kit - FREE 2 DAY SHIPPING! | eBay

    If I use something like this above (which matches the size of my oil pan hole) this do I need to drill a new hole or just try to re thread ?

    Another question
    If the oil plug bolt is stripped what about getting a new one oil pan bolt see if that fixes the problem?

    Thanks
     
  4. Salamander_King

    Salamander_King Senior Member

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    No, that's not the tap we have been talking about. Do google search on "Timesert", you will find more info on this product. It is much more than just a tap. It is a complete repair kit that will insert a new thread and uses special plug that comes with the kit, but that's not what we have been suggesting. If I remember correctly Time-Sert plug is M16, and the kit works for any stripped threads on oil pan that uses M12, M14 or 1/2 inch plug.

    And about the plug itself being stripped can be checked very easily by just visually inspecting the drain plug when you remove it. If the drain plug is stripped and thread on the oil pan is good, yeah, by all mean just get a new drain plug and your are all done fixing the problem.
     
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  5. Taxi/Limo

    Taxi/Limo Active Member

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    What about this at least as a try ?
    My local parts store has two plugs lengths that fit will work on my 2010
    One is .472 inches (I think this is the one I have now)
    One is .779 inches
    I can try the longer one since it is only three dollars

    Would the longer one cause a protrusion into the engine that would interfere with something?

    Thanks
     
  6. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    In the video he's wailing away at the cap with a hammer and rod, just to get it started. Saying it's the clip that's preventing it turning, is absurd. I've done about19~20 oil filter changes, don't even notice that clip any more. I really think it has no function, other than to satisfy the requirement of some ivory tower engineer.

    I'll be shut of it this Spring, converting to spin-on oil filter bracket.

    Nothing is 100 percent certain, but I think it's a very safe bet you'll be ok with the longer one. Hopefully it it will have a bit more grab. If you can install with torque wrench and achieve the spec'd 27 foot/pounds, think you're good.
     
    #66 Mendel Leisk, Feb 13, 2020
    Last edited: Feb 13, 2020
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  7. Salamander_King

    Salamander_King Senior Member

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    No, it won't. You can try it, but since you have to drain oil to do that, as might as well try to get the tap ready in case a new plug does not fix the problem.
     
  8. Taxi/Limo

    Taxi/Limo Active Member

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    The ebay link I posted is a timesert repair kit You are not talking about that but something else?
    Thanks
     
  9. Taxi/Limo

    Taxi/Limo Active Member

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    I am a novice
    What do you mean by tap?
    Thanks for your patience
     
  10. jzchen

    jzchen Newbie!

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    Thoughts on welding/gluing a nut to the outside surface of the pan?

    moto g(7) power ?
     
  11. jzchen

    jzchen Newbie!

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    K&N sells spin on filters with a hole on a nut at the end, for you to tie a wire just in case it happens to blow off. My iQ has a metal cap and I do not recall the same clip. It has to be a safety in case those threads fail, sending the cap shooting outwards. But they over-engineered the cap as there are so many stuck cap cases!

    Enjoy the spin on. I was not able to find the union bolt spec during my EU Tech Info subscription sadly...


    moto g(7) power ?
     
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  12. Rebound

    Rebound Senior Member

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    I looked into these. I don’t think they’re a good choice for this. A Time-Sert is like a helicoil. The problem is that you’re using the threads to hold in oil, and this creates two sets of threads. And you still have the problem that the threads need to be precisely true, or else the drain bolt won’t seal the oil in. And, it costs more.
     
  13. jzchen

    jzchen Newbie!

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    Well, oil will seep out once you back the bolt out some. The gasket is the primary seal for the oil. The main question posted was the concern it would not be perpendicular so the bolt would not hold the gasket down flush.

    moto g(7) power ?
     
  14. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    I don't think so. The seal is between the underside of bolt head and washer, and between washer and the pan.

    @jzchen beat me to it, and more complete to boot.
     
  15. Salamander_King

    Salamander_King Senior Member

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    As @Rebound explained, Time-Sert is similar to another type of thread repair jig called helicoil. Both are inserts that will be placed inside of the drilled hole that is re-tapped. I have never used either of them, but from my reading, they can be as permanent as the original. The simpler tap solution that has been suggested here is to make the hole bigger with a drill and create a new thread on it using a tap and use a larger bolt (drain plug) that will fit on this new drain hole. I think both Time-Sert and Helicoil if you choose the right size insert, you can use the original drain plug. In terms of difficulty, I think they are all about the same. In terms of cost, simple tap and larger bolt can be as low as $10 as shown in previous comments, but a more complete retapping kit like the Lisle set suggested above would cost more than $100. Time-sert kit is also a bit expensive around $100 as a kit as you found it on eBay or more on a store shelf. Helicoil is much cheaper, but I am not aware of a nice kit that comes with a drill bit and a tap like Lisle or Time-sert.

    Since you don't know if the thread is just damaged or stripped and the messed up thread is on oil pan or on the drain plug bolt, we don't know if you need to retap the oil pan drain hole or not. If the damage is only on the bolt (drain plug), then it can be very easily fixed by replacing it with a new one. But to find out, you will have to drain oil empty and examine the plug. At that point, if you don't see any abnormality with the plug, and replacing with a new plug (either OEM or longer plug) does not fix the problem, it is most likely the thread on the oil pan is messed up. So, to fix this, you have to have a drill and a tap of the right size handy. I never have done re-tapping the oil pan. I did not have to do that on my son's Honda, for a longer drain plug fixed the problem. Changing a plug is as easy as changing oil but drilling and re-tapping oil pan may not be something you want to try DIY depending on your skills and tools you own. For example, if the drill is not perfectly perpendicular, it may leak oil. To make sure the drill bid is perfectly perpendicular with a hand drill, you may have to rise the car up much higher than you would normally for a simple oil change. If something did not go well and oil leaks a lot, you may not be able to drive your car to a shop to be fixed professionally. In the end, a DIY project may end up costing you much more.
     
  16. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    This all likely came about due to "professional" oil changes... :cautious:

    Tough call. In OP's shoes I think I'd score a new pan, new bolt (and washer), and a tube of Permatex Ultra Black, and have at it.

    I forget, has dealership been asked for a quote?

    Interesting tool for loosening the old oil pan:


    Amazon.com: oil pan separator
     
    #76 Mendel Leisk, Feb 13, 2020
    Last edited: Feb 13, 2020
  17. Salamander_King

    Salamander_King Senior Member

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    Yeah, most likely, but at least OP was doing his own Oil Change last time. That's how he found out about not-snug drain plug.
    For my son's Honda, I was quoted $450 for oil pan change at a non-dealer auto shop. They would not do oil pan thread repair, but if OP can find a competent mechanic willing to help him with thread repair, it should be much less than oil pan change.
     
  18. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    There was a lady here with a 2nd gen needing oil pan replacement, and they (Toyota dealership) were quoting her around $250 US, to the best of my recollection. If you don't ask, you'll never know. And phone a few dealerships, who knows.
     
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  19. Salamander_King

    Salamander_King Senior Member

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    Yeah, at $250, I would take mine to that dealer if oil pan changes was the only way to fix it. Wait, no I did not have to do that, all I had to do was to change with a longer drain plug. The grand total of $5.
     
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  20. Georgina Rudkus

    Georgina Rudkus Senior Member

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    I would start with the $10 13mm kit from Amazon first. It will likely go in 90 degrees "square," since there is only half a millimeter larger than the original 12mm hole.

    The second option, should the 13mm strips, is to go to the M14x.1.5 tap and Honda OEM type plug,

    Replacing the entire oil pan would be the last resort.