

- Vampire pump or oil sampling bottles
- Clean sample bottles and permanent marker (mark LF/RF, engine, etc.)
- Engine oil and final drive oil (15W-40 per SY16C manual)
- New engine oil filter(s) and filter wrench sized to the old filter
- Basic hand tools (including 17 mm for the engine drain on the SY16)
- Rags, drain pans, and gloves
- Grease gun with appropriate grease
- A camera or phone to log condition and hours
- Run the machine until oil is at operating temperature. Warm oil circulates contaminants and gives a representative sample.
- Use the vampire pump to pull samples from the final drives. If a planetary gear blocks the sampling port, move the track slightly forward to clear the gear so you get a clean pull.
- Label each bottle clearly (for example LF for left final) and note the machine hours and date. Send samples to your analysis lab.
- Glitter or metallic particles — signs of metal wear or contamination
- Milky or cloudy oil — indicates water or coolant intrusion
- Dirt or heavy particulate — seals or breathers may be compromised
- Place drain pan under the engine drain plug. The SY16C requires a 17 mm for the engine drain.
- Remove the drain plug and let oil flow. Lift the dipstick or oil fill cap to help the pan drain faster.
- Remove the old oil filter. Warning, this gets a little tight in the SY16C.
- We like to test the new filter on the filter wrench so we know it fits before wrestling it into place.
- Lightly oil the O-ring on the new filter and mark it with the date and hours before installation…you’ll thank yourself later.
- Install the new filter to spec and reinstall the drain plug.
- Per the manual, the engine holds about 0.5 gallons (2 quarts). Final drives are roughly 0.5 quart each on the SY16C. Expect roughly 3 quarts total when you account for the engine plus both final drives.
- Fill the engine with the specified 15W-40 until at the correct dipstick reading and fill finals to the point oil begins to flow out of the fill plug or to the fill mark. You can use either a funnel or a hand pump to get the job done if you’re not working in a shop with a dedicated oil transfer pumps.
- Start the machine for 10-15 seconds to circulate fresh oil through the filter. Shut down and wait about a minute for oil to settle, then re-check the dipstick and final drive levels.
- Check the air filter and replace if excessively dirty
- Inspect the overflow bottle and confirm coolant level is at the full mark
- Look through the engine bay for oil leaks, damaged hoses, cracked wiring connectors, or loose clamps
- Grease boom, stick, bucket pivot, swing bearing, and other fittings per the grease schedule
- Visually inspect tracks, shoes, rollers, and sprockets for damage or excessive wear
- Do a general walk-around to confirm lights, horn, wipers, guards, and safety decals are in place
- Always mark sample bottles; a mis-labeled sample is useless.
- Oil is best sampled hot since cold samples mask circulating wear.
- Oil the filter O-ring before installation so it comes off easily next time.
- Size up the new filter to your wrench before you get into tight spaces.
- If you have to move a track to clear a planetary gear for sampling, do it slowly and safely and follow lockout procedures.
- Elevated iron or nickel: internal gear or bearing wear; plan a tear-down or schedule extra monitoring
- High copper or brass: wear on bushings or thrust parts; inspect related components
- Water contamination: trace source (breather, cracked cooler line, or seal failure) and fix immediately
- Write the date and hours on the filter and on your service log
- Keep oil analysis history to track trends…one bad lab result is a concern, a rising trend is actionable
- Dispose of used oil and filters according to local regulations
Date: 03.19.2026
Tags:
Loading Posts...
Loading Inventory...