Hi this my first post. Took delivery of my GenV at VIR two weeks ago. Allowed DMS - Dodge Motorsports and NARRA to use as the pace car for the weekend. Jon B from PartsRack is the pace car driver for these events. Anyway, 100 miles to the track (from NC); 140 miles on the track (equates to roughly 1,400 street miles) plus the hot weather idling plus a 400 + miles drive home (Cincinnati) and in three days the car had 640 documented miles plus the extra motor use at the track.
I did the oil change in my garage in about 60 minutes. Much of this is waiting for complete oil drainage. Can't imagine why anyone would pay upwards of $300 to have done. After a one time cost of ramps ($70. for great progressive step up style) and a 11+ quart oil drain pan ($8 at AutoZone) the remaining cost was $15. for the oil filer ( SRT # / Mopar # Mo-041) and 11 quarts of Mobil 1 0W/40 Euroblend (Autozone $62 total. 2 - 5 quarts and a single). So the cost after the first one is about $78 plus knowing you've done it yourself and done it right.
Here were my steps:
1. Warm car - oil by driving for a short distance. Drive car onto - ramps *careful about where you are if in your garage. The hood is way up there when fully open; garage door motors, etc could be in the way. I was close and lucky when I looked up!
2. Chalk both rear wheels. Car in forward gear and e brake on.
3. Center pan under engine and remove drain bolt (13MM) from drivers side. Be sure red o-ring gasket is on the drain bolt - not stuck to pan or in the oil!
4. Allow to drain until completely stopped. I went to pass side and jacked up (without being under car) at the lift point to help all the oil drain. 20 minutes or so and it was completely drained. I let car back down on ramp so completely secure again.
5. Check drain bolt (any fragments on magnetic end, etc. Clean off, ensure o ring is on correctly up to head of bolt and thread back into pan. Hand tighten until
tight. Then tighten to 20 ft pounds of torque. * Stay away from big 1/2" rachets. You only need a 3/8". This is all aluminum and you don't want to over
torque.
6. Move to front-center of Viper. Directly in front of pan you will see the filter. Plenty of room for a standard filter wrench. Remove and allow to drain. BE SURE
the old gasket is not on the engine filter housing.
7. Open new filter. I Sharpie two marks; a 'line' and a 'X' at 180 apart on the filter bottom to do this correctly. This filter goes straight up so you can pre-fill/prime. Also can mark the install date and mileage.
with new oil before spinning on. Also run oil on the gasket (don't pour - rub on with fingers). Wipe off the housing ensuring it is clean and shiny then hand turn
on the new filter. When you feel it contact the housing, you have 1 full turn to go. Note where your Sharpie marks are (otherwise the filter is all white and you
will not be able to judge one full turn). You can with one hand, then both get about 3/4 of the turn needed. Then carefully put on your wrench and smoothly
turn to the one full turn mark.
8. Fill the engine (driver's side oil fill) using the 2 - 5 quart jugs. Put car in neutral and start. Oil pressure should come up in 2-3 seconds on dash display. Check
drain plug and oil filter for any problems - leaks. All should look good so back her down the ramps to level location and turn off. Allow oil to settle then begin
checking. I did not think mine would take the full 11 because at 10 it was on the lower end of the safe mark. After repeatedly checking the amount need from
the bottom end of the Safe mark to the top is about 1 quart. * As noted by some others, I put a light score mark on the back side of the dip stick
corresponding to the stamp[ed marks on the other side. Much easier to see.
9. If your service was showing due, reset the dash using the ignition / gas pedal procedure in the DVD or manual.
!0. Please take your old oil to the store for recycling. Do not pitch in the garbage.
That's it. You've saved +$200 towards other mods and you're a true car guy! And your Viper will think you're a bad...!
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