Easy: omit the crush washer and/or hand tighten the plug.
True... wow.. that kind of incompetence should not be working on any cars
Easy: omit the crush washer and/or hand tighten the plug.
Completely agree LBear...I would change it myself but I advised her to go to the dealership for the warranty period so that in case something goes wrong, we would have a proven record of maintenance through their dealer network. Rethinking that now though for sure...
And that's why I change my own motor oil. You can't trust anyone, even dealerships to do this correctly.
Read the news today, there is a huge shortage of skilled labor. Everyone is going into the IT and business fields and almost nobody is going into the skilled labor field.
Study showed most 18-25 years olds do not know how to change their own motor oil in their cars. It was a staggering 90%. Back when I grew up (1980s), the opposite was true, 90% of teenagers knew how to change motor oil. So it's the 20 year old at the dealership changing your oil. Not the master mechanic who is probably in his 40's or 50's.
By 16 years of age I was changing my own motor oil. Today, most teenagers are clueless when it comes to skilled trades. Builders out here can't find skilled tradesmen so they are bringing them from Mexico. Teenagers and young adults are scared and clueless about manual skilled labor. They believe their smartphones and computers can do everything. Unfortunately there isn't an app which will change your leaking toilet gasket or change your motor oil on your car for you.(wow)
This happened to me a few years back at the Ford dealership. Picked up the car after an oil change and drove ~2 miles home. Opened the garage door and pulled in the garage. As I stepped around back to close the garage door, I noticed a huge puddle of fresh oil in the driveway. Looked under the car and a huge puddle there as well. I immediately took the car back to the dealership. There was oil all over the service drive-through floor and they were frantically trying to find the vehicle it came from. I walked in and told them about my car. So they pulled it in the bay and found the tech had incorrectly installed the oil filter and had pinched the gasket allowing the oil to leak out. They apologized profusely and gave me the next two oil changes for free. Needless to say, they did not get a good review from me this time around.
I passed the car on to my parents when I bought my Mazda. It had over 150,000 on it at the time and they still drive it today but don't put many miles on it. Probably around 160K on the odo now. It was a good car for being the first year model Fusion, hardly any issues with it over the 10 years I owned it. I believe since I caught the leak early it helped. Who knows what would have happened if I had left the dealership and headed anywhere else but home!
Check the oil level before starting it up.
The 17 has the access panel and everything is right there.
I would change the oil from here on out.
Always check the oil level when the engine is cold making sure the CX-5 is on a level surface
I've never built a home before and going on of my skills I learned as a teenager and young adult. I tackled the project and today, I can say I built my own home and it's perfect. Everything I did either I did myself or I supervised the trades. I saved around $60,000 by doing the work myself.
There's a stigma today that working a trade is for "dumb" people and only IT work is for intelligent people. That's absolutely not true. Yet, that is the stigma today. Mike Rowe from Dirty Jobs talks about this and even petitioned congress about it.
That's why teenagers and young adults, most of them today, cannot do simple mechanical skills like changing the oil or even repairing household issues.
Im on the railway now and when we root cause incidents, there is an immediate cause, an underlying cause and if a root cause can be identified, it is ALWAYS down to management.
It's because why repair something when you can throw it out and get a new one
I've never built a home before and going on of my skills I learned as a teenager and young adult. I tackled the project and today, I can say I built my own home and it's perfect. Everything I did either I did myself or I supervised the trades. I saved around $60,000 by doing the work myself.
There's a stigma today that working a trade is for "dumb" people and only IT work is for intelligent people. That's absolutely not true. Yet, that is the stigma today. Mike Rowe from Dirty Jobs talks about this and even petitioned congress about it.
That's why teenagers and young adults, most of them today, cannot do simple mechanical skills like changing the oil or even repairing household issues.
We took the car back to the dealership this morning (I checked the oil level before leaving and it was near the max) to have them correct their mistake. The people working the front were apologetic and got it taken care of pretty quickly. They power-washed all of the plastic pieces that had oil all over them and gave us a mat to try and help get the oil off of the driveway. They also offered my wife a free oil change...we'll see if she decides to give them another chance.
The problem turned out to be that when they re-installed the oil drain plug, they didn't tighten it enough to crush the washer. According to the service manager, the leak was coming through the un-crushed washer.