No vent on a 5 gallon pail of oil, just the spout.
The whole "roll" technique is nice when you have something to measure the oil into and a place to do it. You really need a bench or some other raised surface to lay the pail on, or a very short vessel.
We never seem to have anything to measure the oil into. Always a ton of used 1 gallon jugs around but never empty and you never know what's in them. Even if you find an empty gallon jug or one you're sure has the right kind of stuff in it, you still have to get the oil into that tiny spout and no amount of pail rolling is going to achieve that without a funnel. Then the funnel is full of dirt, and all the rags are filthy... It just never ends!
Sometimes you just gotta take the bull by the horns and pour straight from the 5 gallon pail, and take your lumps.
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Today's Featured Article - Identifying Tractor Smells - by Curtis Von Fange. We are continuing our series on learning to talk the language of our tractor. Since we can’t actually talk to our tractors, though some of the older sect of farmers might disagree, we use our five physical senses to observe and construe what our iron age friends are trying to tell us. We have already talked about some of the colors the unit might leave as clues to its well-being. Now we are going to use our noses to diagnose particular smells. ELECTRICAL SMELLS
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