Sunday, July 12, 2015

2008 - 2010 Chrysler Town & Country / Dodge Grand Caravan 4.0L oil change

For those having the 4.0L engine in the Chrysler Town & Country or Dodge Grand Caravan it is difficult finding sources on the Internet regarding any engine-related procedure.  The oil change is quite easy on this vehicle.  I'm able to do this oil change without raising the van in a matter of approximately 30 minutes.


Chrysler 4.0L engine
Materials
5.5 quarts of 10W-30 motor oil
Oil filter (Purolater PL-12222 or equivalent)
Oil catch pan that holds at least 6 quarts
Funnel for adding oil
Rags.  Lots of rags!

Tools
13 mm socket
Socket wrench
Oil filter cap-style wrench

Procedure
Make sure the oil filter comes with a gasket!

  • Get your motor oil.  The warranty requires 10W-30 that meets Chrysler MS-6395.  This Chrysler spec will be posted on the back of the bottle.  Most oil brands meet this requirement.  A notable exception is Mobil oil.  I believe this is due to lack of acquiring the spec from Chrysler more than not being compliant.  If your engine is still on warranty, make sure you use the correct stuff.  This is not a high performance engine.  Conventional oil is good enough; the engine almost always outlasts the rest of the vehicle!
  • Get your oil filter.  I generally use Purolater PureOne filters.  Have a store associate look the the correct model.  Note: Make sure that there is a gasket on the filter!
  • Warm the engine.  Drive it a couple miles so the oil is nice and hot.
  • Park the van on a level surface.  Before shutting off the engine, turn the steering wheel all the way to the right to ease access to the oil drain bolt.
  • From the passenger side, lay on the ground in front of the tire.  Looking up you should see the oil pan.
View from passenger-side.

Oil drain bolt o left.  Oil filter on right.
  • Place oil catch pan under the bolt.
  • Loosen the oil drain plug by turning counter-clockwise using a 13-mm socket and wrench.  I generally grab my torque wrench simply because the added length increases the torque I can apply to the bolt.
  • Once its loose, slowly turn while keeping pressure on the bolt so the hot oil stays in the engine's oil pan.  When you can tell its ready to come out, quickly remove the bolt.  The oil will be hot!  Also, don't drop the bolt into the oil pan.  Its no fun fishing it out of hot motor oil.
  • Pop open the hood.  The hood release is on the dash near the driver's left knee.
  • Unscrew counter-clockwise the engine's oil cap.  It is easily identified with a picture of an oil can and 10W-30 printed on it.  Removing this cap will increase the speed at which the hot oil exits the engine.  Make sure oil is still draining into the catch pan and not overshooting it!
  • Wait until the oil merely drips out of the oil pan.
  • Move the oil catch pan so it can get oil from the drain bolt hole and the oil filter.
  • Put a cap-style oil filter onto your wrench.
Cap-style oil filter remover on wrench.
  • Place the cap onto the oil filter.  Turn counter-clockwise to remove.  When its fully removed, it will dump hot oil.  Make sure your catch pan is placed accordingly.
  • Make sure the old oil filter still has the gasket attached to it.  If its not there, it could be stuck to the engine.  Remove it!  If you don't, you will have a serious oil leak later!  I have changed oil for 25 years and this van was the first that ever had the gasket stick to it.  It was easily removed after I wasted about 4 quarts of oil.
  • Wait for all oil to drip from the engine. This will take approximately 20 minutes.
  • Screw the bolt back into the engine block by hand.  Use your socket and wrench to further tighen it.  Do not over-tighten!  Use a torque wrench to be sure.  Note: The oil bolt contains a gasket.  See the diagrams below:
Correct placement of gasket on oil bolt.
Incorrect placement of gasket on oil bolt.
This needs pushed down into the seat.
  • Using your finger, smear oil on the oil filter gasket.  This will ensure a good seal.
  • Put the oil filter onto the oil filter shaft as tight as you can using your hands.  You may use a torque wrench to make sure its on tight enough.  Generally, I just make it as tight by hand as possible.
  • Place a funnel into the oil filler location in the engine compartment.
  • Add 5.5 quarts of oil.
  • Put oil filler cap back in place.
  • Fire up the engine and make sure the oil pressure light goes out.  If it doesn't, shut off the engine immediately.  Something is wrong.  Consult a car guy!
  • If there are any leaks, tighten the bolt or filter.
  • This Chrysler engine is odd.  It takes mine an entire evening for all the oil to drain into the oil pan.  Do a precursory check now to make sure its within spec on the dipstick.  Add if necessary.  Check a second time in the morning!

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Cricket Wireless Review - Stark County, Ohio

I have a deep, dark secret.  Don't tell any one!  I'll post it here on this blog so no one will see it.

I pay too much for my wireless service.  I know....hard to believe, right?  I honestly paid more for wireless the past few years than for my last car!  That is ridiculous!

Well, no more!

I have taken control of this bill and kicked Verizon to the curb!  I'm not longer afraid that only the fullest coverage will do!  No more fear!  I'm not going to take it any more!!!!!

What!?!?!
Okay, that was a bit dramatic.  I think we are all paying too much for what is basically a utility.  Its just voice and Internet for goodness sake!  The magic of mobile is now common place. Its 2015 and there are now real options!

In the mid-2000s you had to rely on the Big Four.  Not today.  Everybody has been expanding networks.  Competition has gotten fierce.  And growth has stagnated for the providers.  It seems everyone has a smartphone because pretty much everyone does.

Let's take advantage of that!


Location!  Location! Location!

Those are the three most important things about wireless.  If the network is not available where you are commonly, there is no point.

We had been faithful customers of Verizon Wireless for at least a decade.  We only had a handful of issues over the years.  We were happy with the service. We had added our kids.  The bill quickly became as big as a new car payment....just for talk and Internet service.  Something had to change! 

I spent a lot of time analyzing the wireless providers.  There are basically four: Verizon (Big Red), AT&T (Death Star), T-Mobile (the Uncarrier), and Sprint (works only near NASCAR tracks.)  In Stark county a lot of friends complain about coverage with Sprint and T-Mobile.  That's shame because I really like the Uncarrier's philosophy.  We spend a lot of time in Stark and the area south so we need coverage there.  That left only Verizon and AT&T as viable (expensive) options.

Consumer Reports recommends checking out an MVNO.  These are companies that lease excess bandwidth from the four primary providers.  Some examples are Virgin Mobile, Consumers Cellular, and Straight Talk. Unfortunately, nearly all of these lease from T-Mobile or Sprint.

That's where Cricket Wiresless is different.

Cricket was recently purchased by AT&T.  They have since converted all new service to AT&T towers.  Their prices are also much better than Verizon and AT&T with few limitations.

Local Coverage
After two weeks I have determined that coverage has been excellent where its important.

My coverage has been excellent around Akron, Canton, and Massillon.  In fact some of the known Verizon dead spots are not AT&T dead spots.  Coverage in Massillon is MUCH better on Cricket.  Cricket also has good coverage in Dover and New Philadelphia in Tuscarawas county.

Around Atwood Lake and Mineral City, I do lose coverage.  I'm not sure how those locations fare on the Verizon network..

Data
Cricket Wireless uses 4G LTE.  That is currently the fastest technology on the consumer market.  There is a catch though.  It is throttled to 8 mb/s.  In my experience that is plenty fast.  Its fast enough to watch an HD video.

I could get much faster in some locations with Verizon.  At my house, my Cricket speed is double Verizon's.

Phones
Cricket offers several phones.  We opted for the cheapest.  They offered a $1 Nokia Lumia 635 if you transfer an existing number.  The Nokia is a good phone and gets the job done.  It uses Windows Phone 8.1 which is a good operating system, but the available apps pale in comparison to the Apple or Android version.  This particular model does not have a good camera.

Cricket also offers several Android and Apple phones at various price points including the latest iPhones and Samsung Galaxy S models.

I have read that you may use any AT&T or Go Phone without issue.  All you would need to purchase is a new SIM card.  Generally, Sprint and Verizon phones only work with their respective networks.  Note: Some global models of the other providers may work if you get the provider to unlock it.

You will pay an additional one-time $25 activation fee per line.  Two years ago we paid Verizon a $30 or $35 activation fee per line.

Most wireless provides can now "port" your existing wireless number to your new service.  Cricket was able to port ours in a few hours.

Cost
Cost was the primary driver for our switch from Verizon.  I cut my bill by nearly 60%!  I also increase my minutes to unlimited.  I also added an extra half GB per line.  And the kicker: I added a fifth line!

Five lines: $100!  That's it.  Out the door.  No extra taxes.  No extra fees.  No surprise charges.  Each line gets 2.5 GB of data.  When you hit the max, it slows to 2G speeds which is about double a dial-up connection.

Customer Service
I left the Cricket store with my new phones and a surprisingly low first month of service paid.  The next day I checked my account using the My Cricket app on the phone and they had my next payment listed way higher than I expected.  Using the chat feature, I worked with a rep named Saul.  He quickly explained that we were signed up for the next tier plan (5 GB per line).  He corrected it without any issues.  It took about a half hour, but everything was squared away without issue.

Pros and Cons
Pros:
  • Much lower cost!!!!!
  • Similar coverage to Verizon.
  • You must purchase your own unlocked GSM phone.
  • No contract!
  • Essentially unlimited data if you can tolerate 2G speeds
  • No new phone number
Disadvantages:
  • You must purchase an unlocked GSM phone, AT&T phone, or Cricket phone.
  • Verizon does have better nationwide coverage, but AT&T is a close second.
  • 4G LTE data speed is limited to 8 mb/s down.
  • Your phone cannot be a Wi-Fi hot spot.
Conclusion - CHOOSE FREEDOM!
For two weeks we have been very happy with the service.  After this experience, its amazing so many people still sign up for post paid contracts from the Big Four providers.

If you are contemplating switching providers, consider the following:
  • Determine where you will need coverage most often
  • Using the four primary providers coverage maps, determine the best for your needs.  Keep in mind that there are different coverage maps for voice and data coverage.  You may not need data coverage in all locations where you would need voice coverage.
  • Find the MNVOs on the best provider network for you.
  • Compare limitations of the MNVOs
    • Is data speed throttled?  Can you tolerate this slower speed?
    • Is data capped at a reasonable limit? Any overage charge?
    • Do you need to use your phone as a Wi-Fi hot spot?
    • Does it offer an appropriate number of minutes? (Unlimited is very common now.)
  • Check if the MVNO can use your existing phone or if they offer a phone that you desire.
  • If you are switching providers, call your current provider:
    • Check that you are not on a contract.
    • Ask to have the phone unlocked (worth more if you sell it unlocked.)
  • Switch and stop sending cash to someone else!!!!