samiamPA
Pre-takeoff checklist
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- Mar 23, 2020
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samiamPA
Just got a new-to-me Cessna 150! It has about 1500 smoh and does not have an oil filter. I'm thinking about how to manage the oil changes.
It seems like the best thing to do would be to put an oil filter adapter on and change the oil and filter every 3-4 months. I only ask the question here because I'm likely only going to be putting 50 or at most 75 hours on per year. Thus, I would be doing a lot of changes based on calendar months and not hours.
1. With this low use time annually and high time engine, does a filter still make sense?
2. If the oil is changed every 4 months but the hours are low, do you always change the filter at the same time?
3. Is doing an oil analysis helpful with every oil change even if you are comparing a usage interval if the hours are different (for example, 8 hours vs 25 hours) or should it just be collected based on hourly intervals?
My thought is to just do it all, even if it's overkill, since oil is the cheapest part of owning an airplane and engines are pretty important.
It seems like the best thing to do would be to put an oil filter adapter on and change the oil and filter every 3-4 months. I only ask the question here because I'm likely only going to be putting 50 or at most 75 hours on per year. Thus, I would be doing a lot of changes based on calendar months and not hours.
1. With this low use time annually and high time engine, does a filter still make sense?
2. If the oil is changed every 4 months but the hours are low, do you always change the filter at the same time?
3. Is doing an oil analysis helpful with every oil change even if you are comparing a usage interval if the hours are different (for example, 8 hours vs 25 hours) or should it just be collected based on hourly intervals?
My thought is to just do it all, even if it's overkill, since oil is the cheapest part of owning an airplane and engines are pretty important.