I apologize for raising such a trivial question: how does one determine the ‘right’ level of oil in the M130 engine?
While researching some data on 280SL cylinder heads, I came upon a set of (reproduction) stickers, in German (the meaning of which I can more or less decipher), one of which said (again more or less): ‘check oil level while engine is running’.
Until now, I’ve always checked the oil level in a car either before starting it (cold), or after letting the engine rest for a few minutes (if hot), so that the oil that’s been circulating around the engine flows back down in the pan.
First question: have I been wrong in the past (always happy to learn something)?
Second question: should the oil level when checked the Mercedes way (with engine running) reach the maximum level on the dipstick? Or should I (we) just verify that the oil level is safely above the minimum level on the dipstick when the engine is running, but not up to the maximum? Then what is the use of the maximum mark on the dipstick?
Third question, a bit less practical, almost philosophical (though not quite mystical): it doesn’t strike me as typical of the German engineering culture (for which I have immense admiration) to suggest a somewhat imprecise measurement method, which checking the (hot, therefore very fluid) oil in a running engine seems to be; so what am I missing (or mistranslating)?
I’m tempted to suggest a normalized way of checking the oil in any and all engines, but I could be making a lot of enemies:
- the oil level in a Honda lawn mower (I have two different models, both to be treated the same way) should be measured with engine stopped, on the dipstick unscrewed from its housing, just resting on top of it
- the oil level on my ISEKI field mower (Kawasaki engine) should be checked with engine at rest, dipstick fully screwed in
- all my other cars (Audi, Toyota, Isuzu, Renault) should be checked with engine at rest
- now the Mercedes M130 way, with engine running
Why is the world so complicated? 😕🙃🤪