Originally posted by Gasser64
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Might need an attorney..Walmart fucked up my truck
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Double gasket will usually, and no gasket for dang sure, will dump quarts of oil in seconds. It won't be a drip or steady stream, it will be a flood and likely audible of the exhaust is stock or no loud surrounding noises. Literally can pump 3 quarts plus in 5-10 seconds of run time. I'd slide under and take a look at what you have going on, don't mess with anything, just visually inspect to see if anything looks apparent, possibly start it for a second to make the leak apparent. Also take the part number from the oil filter AMF do a Google search to verify its correct for your application. They'd have to over tighten it something crazy to fuck the filter adapter up, and if they cross threaded it, they would have to have put it on all the way with a filter wrench, I hope the employee wasn't that incompetent
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Originally posted by shumpertdavid View PostDouble gasket will usually, and no gasket for dang sure, will dump quarts of oil in seconds. It won't be a drip or steady stream, it will be a flood and likely audible of the exhaust is stock or no loud surrounding noises. Literally can pump 3 quarts plus in 5-10 seconds of run time. I'd slide under and take a look at what you have going on, don't mess with anything, just visually inspect to see if anything looks apparent, possibly start it for a second to make the leak apparent. Also take the part number from the oil filter AMF do a Google search to verify its correct for your application. They'd have to over tighten it something crazy to fuck the filter adapter up, and if they cross threaded it, they would have to have put it on all the way with a filter wrench, I hope the employee wasn't that incompetent
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I've been burned by Wal-Mart a couple of times, both with my Lincoln. First time they failed to properly secure the cover (no idea what they call it) underneath the car and it came off while I was driving. Second time they overfilled it. Both times I contacted the Service Manager at Walmart but didn't pursue it much further.
I'm not mechanically inclined but changing my own oil is one of the few things I can do myself so I try to do it myself whenever I can. I've used Walmart when I've been in a hurry or the weather isn't good enough for me to be crawling underneath either of my vehicles. And the price for a synthetic oil change isn't bad either.
Anyway, one thing that's made it easier for me to change the oil myself is adding a Fumoto oil drain valve. I just roll the vehicle onto some ramps, hook up a line to it, and drain it directly to a container. Hardest part is removing the covers to get to everything. If I rushed things and was careful, I could probably get it drained and refilled in 15-20 minutes. As it is now, I take like an hour to make sure everything completely drains out. Anyway something to think about.
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^^^^^
I've heard those covers being called underbody splash pans or under engine splash pans. One of our cars has a plastic one, and it makes an otherwise easy change take 3X longer. I've considered leaving it off, but admittedly it does keep the entire area under the block and transmission clean. I can easily see a change place not putting it back on correctly and having it fall off.
Only minor bad experience I had with a shop was at a Ford dealer that rounded off the drain plug on a Ranger I used to have.
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I understand the need to be cautious here, but do you have reason to believe you ran the motor too much while low on oil?
Just wondering if it's worth raising the stink so it gets temporarily corrected, but then proceeding to just resolve it to ease your stress? Ultimately, I'd want to check it out myself - but I'd also consider just having an independent mechanic diagnose and resolve the issue. I'd not trust the wal-mart group to not patch/conceal the problem if there was something major wrong. This could be a really simple fix, but it may not be at this point.
Even if good intention-ed folks at Wal-mart - never know what sleazy things corp or other outside influences may pressure them into doing.Originally posted by MR EDDU defend him who use's racial slurs like hes drinking water.
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All this mention of how quickly a double gasket (or no gasket) could spew out several quarts of oil has me wondering how he would have made it 5 miles if that were to be the issue. And if by some chance he did make it, my next concern would be starving the lifters. Not enough for a complete failure but shortening the lifespan where you might have issues in the near future.
I say this because the AFM lifters on these trucks are prone to fail. It's common and it can range from 70k -200k miles. An AFM lifter failure will also eat up the cam lobe.
I have an 07 Sierra with the 5.3/AFM as well. I changed the oil every 5k miles and never had an issue up till 197k miles. Unfortunately, I also had developed gasket leaks that caused the low oil light to turn on at approximately 5k miles after an oil change, hence the 5k mile change interval. One time it turned on and I just couldn't make time to get the oil changed. I think I may have pushed my luck too far and ran it low to the point where I had left to work one morning and about a mile up the road, I started to hear a lifter knock. Oil PSI was fine. Limped it back home and IIRC, oil didn't register on the dipstick. That's when I found out about the common AFM lifter issue. I can't say with 100% certainty that I starved it or if it was just my turn for the AFM failure but I wanted to tell my story in case they find a gasket issue, change the oil/filter, give you a few coupons and say "that was close, see you next time"
I ended up getting a GM certified engine, I'd have to find the paperwork to see who the actual builder was but I now have 43k miles on that thing without a single issue.
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GeorgeG, do you not check the oil between oil changes? I find it crazy how many of my customers are shocked that I find their car low on oil. I will sometimes randomly check the oil and coolant level when doing other repairs just because I'm under there. Any motor, whether new or old, can use/leak/burn oil. To never check it or just assume it may be full because you don't get a warning light or hear any bad noises is ridiculous to me.
Usual response to having found the vehicle low on oil and alerting customer is " they never told me it was low when I got my oil changed" . I had a lady in last month, Nissan Rogue with 74K miles. It was brought in for what they called exhaust noise, drove the car and heard odd engine type noise so came back and check the oil. 3.75 quarts later it was back at full and the motor sounded quiet again. I no doubt expect it to have mechanical issues in the near future as a result. The really bad part is that I diagnosed a 3.8 Mustang for them several years before for the same basic issue. It eventually let to really heavy oil consumption and it was traded in towards this Rogue.
Do people never learn....
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Originally posted by shumpertdavid View PostGeorgeG, do you not check the oil between oil changes? I find it crazy how many of my customers are shocked that I find their car low on oil. I will sometimes randomly check the oil and coolant level when doing other repairs just because I'm under there. Any motor, whether new or old, can use/leak/burn oil. To never check it or just assume it may be full because you don't get a warning light or hear any bad noises is ridiculous to me.
Usual response to having found the vehicle low on oil and alerting customer is " they never told me it was low when I got my oil changed" . I had a lady in last month, Nissan Rogue with 74K miles. It was brought in for what they called exhaust noise, drove the car and heard odd engine type noise so came back and check the oil. 3.75 quarts later it was back at full and the motor sounded quiet again. I no doubt expect it to have mechanical issues in the near future as a result. The really bad part is that I diagnosed a 3.8 Mustang for them several years before for the same basic issue. It eventually let to really heavy oil consumption and it was traded in towards this Rogue.
Do people never learn....
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Originally posted by shumpertdavid View PostGeorgeG, do you not check the oil between oil changes? I find it crazy how many of my customers are shocked that I find their car low on oil. I will sometimes randomly check the oil and coolant level when doing other repairs just because I'm under there. Any motor, whether new or old, can use/leak/burn oil. To never check it or just assume it may be full because you don't get a warning light or hear any bad noises is ridiculous to me.
Usual response to having found the vehicle low on oil and alerting customer is " they never told me it was low when I got my oil changed" . I had a lady in last month, Nissan Rogue with 74K miles. It was brought in for what they called exhaust noise, drove the car and heard odd engine type noise so came back and check the oil. 3.75 quarts later it was back at full and the motor sounded quiet again. I no doubt expect it to have mechanical issues in the near future as a result. The really bad part is that I diagnosed a 3.8 Mustang for them several years before for the same basic issue. It eventually let to really heavy oil consumption and it was traded in towards this Rogue.
Do people never learn....
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Originally posted by Stephen View PostDid he actually call you today?
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