QUOTE (fishmn @ Feb 25 2009, 04:28 PM)

I spent some time reading past postings first, to avoid re-asking a question that had been recently answered. Don't want to waste people's time. I did find some talk about cabin filters before there were aftermarkets available, and home-made units.
Cabin air filters: Available on the Net for $8 to $15 and above. I thought before ordering I'd ask if any of you have ordered online and gotten a cabin air filter so cheap/wrong size/some reason you wouldn't use it. Saving money is no good if you can't use it.
Oil filters: still surprised at the cartridge type. My '62 John Deere tractor had one. They're actually in stock locally from Fram. Thought I'd ask, as a friend looked at cross-sections of several oil filters years ago (spin-on type, of course) and said he'd never buy a Fram. On the other hand, I peeked in the box and saw "Made in Korea" on the cartridge filter and thought that might be a Korean filter from the company that supplies to Hyundai, so why not buy it? I'll wait in case there are any cautions from you people. Hope it's not a boo-boo to name a brand on this forum.
Oilpan bolt one-use washer. This is new to me. Do all of you buy new washers for every oil change??
Finally, I don't think I wanna buy a special oil filter wrench that'll tell me when I'm at about 19.8 foot-pounds torque on the oil cap. I bet you guys tighten it down until it feels tight?
Thanks for your expertise.
-Getting set for 0.25 inches of ice then a few inches of snow on top tommorow in MN
fishmn,
First of all I need your address. Perhaps you will allow me to send some of my 80+ degree air to you, in order to offset some of that Ice and Snow.
Now, down to the business at hand.
The cartridge filter you found with the name "Fram", probably Walmart, is in fact the same filter used by Hyundai. Go ahead and buy it.
As far as the replaceable aluminum crush washers are concerned, replace it with a new one. It is a safe and cheap way to guarantee no leaks. The old one, if reused, may not leak, but whe take the chance?
If you buy the aluminum crush washer from the dealer, they charge far more than if you go to your friendly hardware story, such as Ace, True Value, etc.. They are very cheap.
Of course, you will have to take your old one with you but then you can buy several. Just make sure they are the same thickness and ALUMINUM.
Now about the screw on cap of the oil filter resovoir. No wrench is needed. If it is too tight for you to remove, just get a strip of rubber or something like that (a piece of an old inner tube works well) and remove it by hand.
When replacing, you just hand tighten, but during that process, there will be a point where you will feel some resistance. It is not tight at that point as you are just feeling resistance from the new washer seating itself. Grunt just a bit more and you will feel it give and turn down a bit more before meeting additional resistance. You are now done.
Oh yes, one more thing. Just in case I cannot get that warm air to you in time, get your ice scraper and snow shovel ready. An energy bar works well for those. If you are using a snow blower, gasoline and half of an energy bar will do. One piece of advice however is, do not put the energy bar in the snow blower.
David <><