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Most engine oil, when it reaches the sump, is silvery-black, and most dipsticks are a dark silver colour. This makes checking the oil level a vaguely taxing task. So why not make them white? Or at least a colour that contrasts more with the oil. The only problem i can see would be some kind of coloured
coating reacting with the oil, but surely...
biodiesel
http://www.afdc.doe...fuel/biodiesel.html Won't solve the dipstick problem, but will make your car smell tasty. [hob, Oct 17 2004]
Biodiesel.org
http://www.biodiesel.org/ [Laughs Last, Oct 17 2004]
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Annotation:
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Yeah! They have these springs in the wheels too that do wonderful things. |
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or red - painted? excellent idea. I have good close up eye sight however this is an exercise I fail to do often. |
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remove m-f-d/e like I say, an excellent idea. |
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How about including a dip-stick wiper in the engine? |
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A dip-stick wiper sounds like a good idea, saves worrying about wether your cloth is lint-free or not. |
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Thanks po, i'll consider it. |
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Who here marks their own as bad? Not a Kat! Get outta the Kat tray. Plus 1 |
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/A dip-stick wiper sounds like a good idea/ |
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Something to wipe the dipstick clean as you pull it out? Sorry, I think I may have missed the point here. |
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Whatever the colour, after a few months soaking in hot oil the surface would still be camouflaged to "few - months - old - oil - colour". Nice thought though. Oh, and the dip-stick wiper? What [egbert] said. |
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you chaps, you always miss the point! |
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Well, all you need to do is find another material that doesn't stain and can withstand high temperatures. Pyrex with a white core? |
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A slightly porous ceramic coating? |
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Disposable heat resistant white sheaths? (aka dipstick condoms) |
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What happened to the aluminum anno? I think a light colored metal may be a good solution. |
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This is right in the category of those little rubber connections for your gascap, keeping you from driving off without it. The "nobrainer" type good idea - so clearly good it is hard to see why it has not been baked. Big Ham and Cheese Croissant. |
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//Something to wipe the dipstick clean as you pull it out? Sorry, I think I may have missed the point here.// |
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The idea would be that the wiper would only clean the dipstick as it was being inserted--not as it was being removed. |
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OK..."Aluminum?" I took it down because aluminum dipsticks exist. I enjoy these brainstorming type annotations and didn't want to throw in a showstopper. |
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//The idea would be that the wiper would only clean the dipstick as it was being inserted--not as it was being removed.// |
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Precisely what i've been trying to put into words. |
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"Oh, you mean I was supposed to have the engine off when I did that?" |
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How about a steel float with a position sensor? |
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We have an electronic dipstick in our car. Please don't ask me what color electronic is. |
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Wow! an electronic dipstick is pretty wild. Does it fluctuate with RPM's? |
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It spins around at 1/1000th of the engines speed, just for effect. I bet the fine Dr. has installed an under-hood webcam for visual amusement of the passengers. |
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When I was younger and much more poor my Mom would check the gas in our El Camino with the handle of a broom stick. |
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you couldn't make that up :) |
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Sorry [UnaBubba] it had petrol. Also it had 1 red door and the rest of the vehical was blue. Throw in a white dip stick and viola! a patriotic El Camino. |
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Teflon might do the trick. I'm going to see what I can track down as far as dipstick manufacturers. |
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Dad used to start the truck with a chicken-catcher, (a long rod of steel with a bend and loop at one end and a wooden handle at the other. Bum starter cable. |
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[Worldgineer]'s "steel float with a position sensor" was baked in my old 1962 Rover P4. The fuel gauge doubled as an oil level gauge, connected to a float in the sump. |
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With today's technology, I don't see why we have to resort to dipsticks. Surely, we can have a sensor that detects oil level and another that tests for quality? |
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Come to mention, it why do we need oil? Engines should by now be near frictionless, having electronic spark and fuel management systems, high hardness and/or pneumatic and/or magnetic bearings and fewer moving parts. |
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Maybe we could do without the engine and use a fuel catalysis system or gasoline fired turbine? |
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Above notwithstanding, croissant (+) |
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[FM] The oil is also important to cooling, so in addition to solving the friction problem, you need to sufficiently improve internal combustion efficiency to stop wasting heat energy... |
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+ for the idea - and if oil was edible and tasty, you could just lick it off... Is it time for an engine cooled and lubricated with maple syrup? |
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Perhaps the dipstick should be color-changing, like those spoons they give out in boxes of cereal. Which would also be a nice way to distribute them! I guess it could be heat-sensitive, but oil sensitive would be much much better. |
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I suspect teflon wouldn't work very well. Oil tends to flow very easily across teflon, so when you pull he dipstick out, there will probably just be a single drop hanging from the end of the stick, even if it's actually full. |
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It seems likely that any material that doesn't have this problem would have the problem of getting stained by the oil. |
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bp that is genius. is it possible to blow oil bubbles? |
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i have a ceramic coated dipstick thingymabob in my new car. and it only cost about $20K...the car, on the other hand, was free with purchase. *woot* |
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[bp] Baked on our Suburban. |
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I just finished rebuilding my engine and in the process the original dipstick tube bent somehow. The only dipstick available for my engine(302c.i., 5.0l) is a chrome one. Viewing the oil level is no problem at all, especialy when it reflects something light in hue. Since you have to wipe the dipstick in order to get an acurate reading, that dip stick wiper idea would be something I would invest in. |
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Seems like a good idea.... What about a sight glass. Do away with the dipstick. You could have a remote camera option on cars that would allow you to 'see' the sight glass from within your car. In addition to that you could 'see' various aspects of car operation; check you tie rods ends after a pothole hit, what is that under my seat, did I put the gas cap on, did I put that X in the trunk, check out that female driver at a stop light without eye contact..... |
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Why not paint your dipstick with whiteout... I'll try it on my Toyota Corolla first... Will it void the warranty? :)~ |
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Correct me if I am wrong, but I think you only check the oil level, when the engine has stopped for quite some time. This will allow the oil to flow back to a stable position. So I check my car's oil level every month or so, BEFORE I leave. I have a display on the dashboard which is active for only a few seconds, after that the display shuts down - the level wouldnt be accurate. |
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Now I wonder, why does the dipstick has to sit in the oil all the time? Can the dipstick not be kept separately? |
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Checking the oil would indeed be much easier with a white dipstick. The paint does not have to be heat resistent! |
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So much for the mundane stuff. Electronics in a car seem to be indirect - I tend not to trust them. I would much more prefer something eloborated, like a glass pipe (connected to the oil circuit) on my dashboard, showing the level. |
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My lawnmower has a short gray plastic dipstick, which is usually easy to spot oil with, but some genius decided to make the lawnmower oil blue, which, when thinly coating the dipstick, is nearly indistinguishable. But if the oil were a nice red color... |
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Guys, i just figured it out. You remember when you were a little kid, and you put your straw in a glass of soda, then put your finger over the top of the straw? you were able to pull out the soda, AND...the level of soda in the straw was equal to the level of soda in the cup. So for the dipstick idea, make a hollow dipstick. It can have a slit up one side, at the business end, with a glass covering allowing you to see the level of oil you've trapped. Done. |
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AND you will still have to distinguish between the dark metal and the dark oil through glass AND you won't even have the shiny effect which is what I look for anyway. |
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Replace it with glass and you might have something though. |
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I made one key omission; thank you for pointing it out [Po]. The slit should be on both sides of the hollow metal tube, 180 degrees apart, and high enough that the oil level should never pass out of the visible range. Inside this dually-slit metal tube should be a hollow glass tube. |
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Now you can see the contrast between the dark oil and the clear (albeit filthy) glass. You don't even need the "shiny effect". Marvelous. |
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in this day and age, this dipstick nonsense is mediaeval (well, old-fashioned) there should be a technical gizmo looking like a pipette with a timer that allows you to drop something into the oil and it measures the time taken to pick up the sound of the splash. |
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its a sign of age, when you don't know if someone is talking dirty <g> |
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And what about the oil warning light? Surely there's some kind of sensor in there already, electronic or otherwise, that can tell if the oil level's too high or too low. |
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don't know - hey, you started this!! & you got 43 frigging votes so far. don't forget, it was me that said don't mfe this <grin> |
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Duhh... oh yeah. Well, the solution is clearly to develop live organisms, like sea monkeys or little oil-dolphins, that swim around bouncing sonar off the egdes to gauge how much oil is left. In clean, plentiful oil they emit happy contented noises. In dirty or low oil they emit listless, anxious and depressed noises. To check the oil, you open up your bonnet (after waiting for a few minutes for the oil to settle), place a specially-adapted listening-horn to the side of the sump, press your ear against it, and listen reeeally carefully. |
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Set the oil on fire, see how long it burns? |
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from the instant obsolesence department: make them
disposable, one time use. Dense white paper inserts you
stick in a slot in the tip, with slow wicking action so the
level is accurate. Make it change color depending on the
quality of the oil (white ->yellow -> red) tells you when
you actually need to change your oil. [+] |
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And the problem of not enough oil spilled all over the gas station and roadway. |
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Yeah, cliff d and Worldg, but how about having a reservoir
around the top of the tube, so when it spills out the top,
the excess goes into the res, cap the whole lot, sits
there until level goes down, when a one way flap valve
lets the excess fall into filler tube? Except that the level
is usually way down low on the engine, hard to reach. |
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Thanks for the link, reensure. You managed to find something I couldn't. It would appear that our friends Ray and Tom didn't really reach a conclusion. Clean oil and a white dipstick would still be indistinguishable? I'll have to try than one. Besides, (and sorry to re-iterate slightly) when oil reaches the point at which it can be measured, it is never anywhere near as clear as it was in the can. Still, quite an eye-opener. |
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I reccently rebuilt my motor, ie completely cleaned out inside... and having to use high grade synthetics which are usually transparent and stay that way for a few thousand km .... not to mention the oil seems to migrate along the surface of the metal so the result is i have no friggen idea what my oil level is untill close to when it's time for the next change. |
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So what did I do? I put some paint on my dipstick which helped, but it flaked off... later found it smeared thinly around various internal pats and bearings..................
Since gone dry sump kit .... |
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/cliff-dood/- some in Spain say the cooking oil thing has actually been baked (not fried), converting diesel engines. Is this possible? |
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cliff_dood and git, you're talking about biodiesel, which has been around for a while... though, oddly, I never heard of it till I moved to California. See link. |
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*sccchhchh* Welcome to halfbaked Chicken-hut. *scccchhhch* May I take your order? *sccchhhchh*
"I'll have the 8-piece Chicken meal"
*sccchhhhchch* Original or *scchhchh* Extra Krispy?
"Original - the Extra Krispy gives me gas."
*Erk* - *scccchhhhhh* so, you *sccchhhch* want the Original, right?
"Yeah."
*scchchhhhcchh* m-kay, that'll be 9.47. *scccchchhh* Pull up to the first window to pay, please. *scccchhhhhh*
"Here's 10"
Your change is .53. Pull up to the second window and pop your hood.
... |
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>>> The dipstick in my Toyota Echo IS white! |
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To avoid having to wipe the dipstick, could it 's default position be higher than the sump, requiring one to push it in first before pulling it out? A familiar action for a large segment of the population.. |
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this idea is baked! most new imports come with a wire type dip stick and at the end is a piece of white plastic! the only reason i know is that i work on cars for a living. |
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Why not make white motor oil and then we can all use our standard black dip sticks. |
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Biodiesel is not the same as straight vegetable oil (SVO). Fascinating stuff, see links. BTW, I want an internally illuminated dipstick so I can check the oil level in the dark. |
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ive never had a problem with my dip stick.
dipsticks |
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Baked. Many manufactures place a flat white piece of (non-yellowing, heat resistant, chemical resistant) plastic at the end of a metal dip stick. Most newer vehicles also have an oil level sensor and light sensors that can tell how dirty your oil is, and when it needs to be changed. By the way, even a steel dipstick shows oil just fine, just so long as you change your oil and dont let the inside of your engine get all black and cruddy |
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old dip stick that are dicoloured with soot or smitch can be renewed with a quci scrub with steel wool of fine grit wet/dry emery paper, dont' clean the oil off first, rub it down for a sec, shiny high contrast metal will be restored. USE ONLY FINE grit, to avoid removing the level markings! |
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That's right, Biodiesel. One more step towards soylent petrolem products. When you're tired of grandma, give us a call. |
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[This ad brought to you in part by the department of Bio-Energy conservation.] |
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So simple, I don't know why it's not already done! |
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