The pan came off after a few raps on a wooden dowel with a rubber mallet. The bottom of the pan looked pretty good, for thirty-two years on the job. What little sludge had accumulated there came up with a paper towel wrapped around an index finger. I sprayed the cooling fins with Simple Green, then went to the coin-op car wash and blasted away with the high-pressure spray. Came home and watched the Jets manhandle the Chargers while working the nooks and crannies with Q-tips and Mother's polish. That was the easy part. That was the fun stuff.
Taking off the sump screen (see photo) will require patience. I know. I've done it before. The engineers at Suzuki chose to fasten it with three soft Phillips head screws that feel welded to the screen. Why not a hex-head or socket-head bolt? Something you can get leverage on. Lying on my back with an impact driver underneath the engine, I can deliver only abbreviated strikes. Spray some Seafoam on the screws, hoping the solvent will wick upwards into the threads (osmosis?), tap the screws, then jam the phillips head driver up while torquing with both hands. A good pump in the wrists and hands. Last time it took me about a week to get the job done, and when it was over I had a grip like a python. Some jobs you just can't rush . . . oh well, it's raining
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