Excellent Thank You !They are back in stock now, I'm usually only out for a day or two!
Wow, #7 that brings me back to the beginning of this adventure, as of today I'm at 988 I've made.Mike, just out of curiosity, how many are you up to now? You stick has got to one of the best and most popular mods for a 6G Ranger out there.
I love my #7 stick paired with my PPE deep pan. Makes checking and changing fluid a breese.
Mike, it was your extreme attention to detail and producing a quality product that made people want to support your efforts. I'm happy to have been an early one (I think my stick is #06).Wow, #7 that brings me back to the beginning of this adventure, as of today I'm at 988 I've made.
And thanks! It was all you early customers that so strongly supported me, I would have never got this off the ground without you guys!!
Question for you Tony -- I purchased a 12V pump from Menards and it came with a 48" inlet tube. In your experience, is that a sufficient length for it to go down the MBS dipstick to extract the trans fluid? My gut tells me yes, but I'd rather be more sure before I make the effort to set everything up and realize it's not long enough!You can use the time chart on the last page of the PDF file in my original reply to you to get real close to those temps. Truck was at idle the entire time with the AC on. Don't know if the AC matters, just added for completeness. You've got almost 20 minutes of wiggle room between 140F and 180F to get between 5 and 6, then use the quick cold fill to validate /top it off. Fluid at 140F is at 6 (idle time of 17:50), 180F is at 5 (idle time of 37:20).
Do yourself a favor, purchase and install a Fitzstick. The job gets a a whole lot easier with Fitz's dipstick and funnel. An ORDER OF MAGNITUDE EASIER!
No crawling under a hot truck, no getting dirty, no getting burned.
Suck the fluid out through the dipstick with a $16 pump from Amazon, and refill. I do it in under 35 minutes and never spill a drop....going out or putting in.
but I can tell you the dipstick is designed to accept a 3/8 poly hose, what is the ID of the 48" hose?It is long enough. The real question is the diameter small enough to get passed the fitting going into the transmission. No matter the diameter I'd cut the hose at an angle to help get it past that point.Question for you Tony -- I purchased a 12V pump from Menards and it came with a 48" inlet tube. In your experience, is that a sufficient length for it to go down the MBS dipstick to extract the trans fluid? My gut tells me yes, but I'd rather be more sure before I make the effort to set everything up and realize it's not long enough!
When it comes to Dipsticks, Fitz is the man!Hey, I'm not Tony![]()

Hey, I'm not Tonybut I can tell you the dipstick is designed to accept a 3/8 poly hose, what is the ID of the 48" hose?
Hopefully it will slip over the 3/8 poly hose, be sure to cut the end of the poly hose at an angle so it slides past the bottom fitting.
This is the hose from Home Depot, but 3/8 poly hose is pretty universal wherever you buy it.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Everbil...-D-x-25-ft-Polyethylene-Tube-301762/207144264
Thanks!
Mike
Thanks for you input Mike and you poked at the reason why I asked the question—the input hose I have is 6mm OD but it has a connector end up to the motor that requires 10mm ID and most hoses I could find if I needed a replacement would be 12mm OD, so nearly 1/2" and I knew that would be cutting it too close to maneuver down in the dipstick, probably.It is long enough. The real question is the diameter small enough to get passed the fitting going into the transmission. No matter the diameter I'd cut the hose at an angle to help get it past that point.
You can test it before cutting. It may slide right down into the pan. I sit my pump on the engine cover towards the front of the engine. My inlet hose is 49" long, with an outside diameter of ~1/4" (0.236" or 6mm), inside diameter is only ~1/6" (0.157" or 4mm).
That looks just like the hose I have on my pump. Use those hose clamps!Thanks for you input Mike and you poked at the reason why I asked the question—the input hose I have is 6mm OD but it has a connector end up to the motor that requires 10mm ID and most hoses I could find if I needed a replacement would be 12mm OD, so nearly 1/2" and I knew that would be cutting it too close to maneuver down in the dipstick, probably.
I'm glad to hear your same length input hose reaches where it needs to, Tony! I appreciate the peace of mind.
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A million percent.That looks just like the hose I have on my pump. Use those hose clamps!