Engine has 26 hours since last oil and filter change. Planning a long trip that is expected to end with a couple hours shy of 50, but could easily go a few hours over with unplanned detours. No time during the trip to have oil changed on the road.
Hey, that's a good idea!Dump and replace the oil. Do the filter on the next change.
While I believe that maintenance induced failures are a very real and legitimate concern, I'm not sure that they extend all of the way to oil changes. Just double check the oil level and safety wire and you are good to go.
The ONLY arguments I see as legitimate for not doing it is to save a few dollars, +/- environmental.
Oil is one of the cheapest parts you will put in an airplane. I prefer to be more liberal with my changes.
I'd agree with that, UNLESS you're one of us that has an F&M/Tempest/Stratus oil filter adapter. If that was the case I'd not touch the oil filter before a trip and continue watching it like a hawk. All while carrying new gaskets as called out in the service bulletin/ICA revisions, a new filter, and all other supplies and tools needed for maintenance on said oil filter adapter.While I believe that maintenance induced failures are a very real and legitimate concern, I'm not sure that they extend all of the way to oil changes. Just double check the oil level and safety wire and you are good to go.
In my aircraft the cheek cowlings, which must be removed prior to changing the oil and the filter, are held on by hundreds (seems more like thousands most days) of screws. I can get them off by myself, but putting them back on by myself is a very difficult chore. Moreover, half the screws usually don't want to go back where they went in. It can take a pretty easy 45 minutes just to deal with those before thinking about the oil change, and by the way the oil filter is not the easiest thing to get to either. Not all aircraft are as joyfully simple as a Cessna 150. Thankfully not all are as slow, either.How long does not take to change the oil?