Overfilled Oil (Part 2): Weeping Remote Oil Filter Lines
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Overfilled Oil (Part 2): Weeping Remote Oil Filter Lines
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Whitelightning
Guest





Posted: Sun Dec 26, 2004 6:37 am    Post subject: Re: Overfilled Oil (Part 2): Weeping Remote Oil Filter Lines Reply with quote

food, beverages, silverware... everything from the buffet table.
They move to wherever they are comfortable, and sit with whoever they choose.
Provide trays so your guests will not spill everything all over your house from
carrying too much, nor will they have to make 10 trips back and fourth from the
service stations.



Roast Leg of Amputee

By all means, substitute lamb or a good beef roast if the haunch
it is in any way diseased. But sometimes surgeons make mistakes,
and if a healthy young limb is at hand, then don?t hesitate to cook
it to perfection!

1 high quality limb, rack, or roast
Potatoes, carrot
Oil
celery
onions
green onions
parsley
garlic
salt, pepper, etc
2 cups beef stock

Marinate meat (optional, not necessary with better cuts).
Season liberally and lace with garlic cloves by making incisions,
and placing whole cloves deep into the meat.
Grease a baking pan, and fill with a thick bed of onions,
celery, green onions, and parsley.
Place roast on top with fat side up.
Place uncovered in 500° oven for 20 minutes, reduce oven to 325°.
Bake till medium rare (150°) and let roast rest.
Pour stock over onions and drippings, carve the meat and
place the slices in the au jus.



Bisque ŕ l?Enfant

Honor the memory of Grandma with this dish by utilizing her good
silver soup tureen and her great grandchildren (crawfish, crab or
lobster will work just as well, however this dish is classically
made with crawfish).

Stuffed infant heads, stuffed crawfish heads, stuffed crab or lobster shells;
make patties if shell or head is n

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SBlackfoot
Guest





Posted: Sun Dec 26, 2004 7:06 am    Post subject: Re: Overfilled Oil (Part 2): Weeping Remote Oil Filter Lines Reply with quote

meats together in a large bowl,
then mix each of the other ingredients.
Make balls about the size of a baby?s fist
(there should be one lying around for reference).
Bake at 400°for about 25 minutes -
or you could fry them in olive oil.
Place the meatballs in the tomato gravy, and simmer for several hours.
Serve on spaghetti.
Accompany with green salad, garlic bread and red wine.



Newborn Parmesan

This classic Sicilian cuisine can easily be turned into Eggplant Parmesan
If you are planning a vegetarian meal. Or you could just as well use veal -
after all, you have to be careful - Sicilians are touchy about their young
family members...

6 newborn or veal cutlets
Tomato gravy (see index)
4 cups mozzarella, 1cup parmesan, 1cup romano
Seasoned bread crumbs mixed with
parmesan
romano
salt
pepper
oregano
garlic powder
chopped parsley
Flour
eggwash (eggs and milk)
Peanut oil for frying.

Pound the cutlets.
Dredge in flour, eggs, then the bread crumb mixture.
Fry till golden brown in 350° peanut oil.
In a baking pan, place a layer of gravy,
then one of meat, gravy, and cheese.
Another layer each of meat, gravy, and cheese.
Then bake at 350° for 45 minutes.
Serve on hot pasta with romano cheese.



Southern Fried Small-fry

Tastes like fried chicken, which works just as
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Andy & Carol
Guest





Posted: Mon Dec 27, 2004 2:23 am    Post subject: Re: Overfilled Oil (Part 2): Weeping Remote Oil Filter Lines Reply with quote

I had the problem with my 93 Chevy s-10 Blazer, They driped but never
blew off..I bought a new S-10 pick up with the v6 about 6 months ago,2003
and low and behold the damn oil lines are leaking!! The same type of
crimp,same
type of hose, 10 years, and no improvement!! Last GM product! Intakes are
still
leaking...Dexcool...Camber was way off when new...Instrument panel odometer
keep reseting back to 3850 miles!..new panel installed... Service engine
light...
on and on...I know many of you will get 200,000 miles and 25 miles to a gal.
but I guess I am not that lucky. The dealer is great, he keeps on fixing!!
Andy





"Spiderman" <spiderman@spiderman.com> wrote in message
news:adGdnUDQYJ9ZN1HcRVn-2Q@comcast.com...
Quote:
This is a follow-up to the infamous "Overfilled Oil" post. Of course it
turned out that the oil was only slightly overfilled so it was no problem.
However, while probing around I discovered that the remote oil filter
lines are weeping very slowly where the rubber hoses are crimped to the
metal lines that attach to the oil filter adapter/cooler (note: I only
have the remote oil filter on my 1989 Chevy S10 Blazer 4.3L 4x4...I don't
have the cooler-to-radiator attachments [thank God, that's one less thing
to break!]). The weeping leak is so slow that you cannot feel or see it
while the car is running...it only shows up as a small grease stain on the
skid plate every few days (and of course a few small drips under the car
after its been parked). Thinking back on it, I believe these remote oil
filter lines have been weeping for over a year...however, the odd part is
the oil level in my car is ALWAYS full and the oil pressure is always in
normal operating range. I only change the oil about once a year (I drive
less than 2500 miles/year)...and since there's no detectable drop in oil
level or pressure over that time period, should I treat this as an urgent
"problem" or can I just put it off until time/money permits. Is it really
possible that an oil hose can just blow off (or is that a auto shop scare
tactic?) Would JB Welding the area where the rubber hose crimps to the
metal line help or hurt? I've read that these remote lines always
leak....is it possible to buy replacement lines that won't develop this
slow leak (if so where?).

Sorry for the long post...I hope this doesn't develop into another monster
thread! Merry Christmas!



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