Not sure if it means anything or not but it happens.
No Nasty, it is not draining up. The drain back to the pain is pulling a siphon on the filter and its actually draining down.
However, that does beg the question how air is getting in from the oil pump side.![]()
the filter cannot syphon below the threaded nipple, once the oil is below that point the syphon stops. I`v read on a few threads of the filter being almost empty, but most guys do not measure the oil in the filter with a ruler. they just say it was really low, if you measure the distance the nipple goes into the filter and then measure the oil in the filter you`ll see the oil stopped when the nipple is uncovered. ( do not poke a hole in your next filter and see how low it really is) the filter will be `bout 3/4 full or a little more. but it will not spill any oil when you remove it. there`s a good bit of clearance between the turbo shaft and the 2 bushings and between the bushings and turbo housing. oil pressure goes in the top of the turbo housing and to passages to the bushings and then to the turbo shaft, there`s no seals on the inner ends of the bushings to the shaft, so as the oil comes out of the bushings past the shaft it runs down the drain tube. that`s why the center turbo housing must be level or less than 25 degrees one way or the other. if it is more than 45 degrees tilted ( I forget exactly how many degrees holset specifies, but you get the idea) the oil will fill the bottem of the housing and start to flood the bushing pocket and oil will leak past the maise ring seals on the out side of the bushings, and enter the compressor or the exhaust pipe. as soon as the engine stops the hot oil runs down the large drain tube and any oil in the bushings and pocket drain with it. the drain tube emptys into the oil pan way above the oil in the pan, and that area is exposed to atmosphere through the vent tube on the side of the engine. the turbo drain line MUST NOT enter the pan below the oil level or it will flood the turbo bushing cavity. it is not a closed system. I expect some air gets through the drain tube and depending on the stopped position of the oil pump gears, through the oil pick up tube, after the oil is drained lower than the pick tube inlet opening. if you put a mechanical oil pressure gauge on a cummins you`ll see that every time you start it there will be NO oil pressure for a few seconds, then the pressure will smack the gauge to 50 psi or so. it will not build pressure slowly like a gas engine. that smack is what caused early fram filters and quite a few electric oil pressure sending units to fail. newer fram filters do not come apart internally. the oil hits the filter and gauge HARD because the oil pump is a really high volume pump ( the pick up tube is 1. 250" diameter) and has to fill the oil filter and main oil galley every time you start the engine before it can build oil pressure. the low oil in the filter is the same on my `92 12v and my brother`s `06 24v. my brother`s `06 24v has an amsoil by pass filter high on the driver side of the engine and the outlet line goes into the oil fill cap, and it also drains to just below the nipple.chipster
OK ill take your word for it. It sounds pretty good to me but if it happened to his 04 then my 04. 5 is different? You state that it would cause the filter to drain to the thread nipple, he said its almost empty. Im not trying to pick a fight just would like to get to the bottom of this. I use almost the same technique that you do for oil drain only I dont change it hot. I drive it to where it's going to be changed (usually hot) and park it to let everything drain to the pan. ( and drain the next day) I have a spring loaded filter punch that has a tube around the punch slip it over the filter and pull back the spring on the punch and it punches a hole in the bottom of the filter and drains it into a pan. But I do see that the oil from the filter is not letting it go empty.
BIG
After posting and re- reading your post it still doesn't explain how the air is being drawn thru the turbo drain line (its a closed system) If in fact it did enter there ,UPON STARTING THERE WOULD BE ONE HELL OF AN OIL LEAK SOMEPLACE!!!!OR A BUNCH OF SMOKE OUT THE TAIL PIPE. if the oil were being caught in the turbo housing. ALL GOOD QUESTIONS I CANT WAIT TO HEAR THE ENDING. And the wife said I should read more anyway :-laf
yup, the pre-luber fills the filter and main oil galley, so the piston jets will have oil in them when you start the engine. now lets worry `bout somethin` that`s really important ! like how to get back in the woods next elk season !!! Butch :-laf :-laf :-lafTwo points of interest at least on my truck. 1 I run a FS 2500 on my truck and the point that the oil is sent to the filter is on top of the OEM filter housing wondering if that is why on at least MY TRUCK that when I haven't used the filter punch to drain the filter to remove it when the filter was removed I had allot of oil come off the top of the filter and run down the side of it so at least I knew that my case oil filter was full. FS 2500 is below the level of the normal OEM fliter I would hardly think that it would siphon. 2 I have a pre luber on my truck that when I hit the key it starts the pump on the pre luber and it has oil pressure before I crank the motor so does this mean that the piston oil jets you spoke of have oil pressure on them as well?
BIG