Engine oil dipstick lost in tube, how big of a problem?

This guy has a good solution that retrieved his dipstick.

The dip stick tube is probably going to look something like this:

https://www.morris4x4center.com/media/catalog/product/cache/1/image/800x800/9df78eab33525d08d6e5fb8d27136e95/5/3/53020782_1_5748.jpg

Just remove the bolt/screw holding the bracket onto the block and pull out the tube. The dip stick will be right there.

Some tubes are tapped into the block and fit more snugly. You can use vice grips or some other tool to wiggle the tube out. Even if the tube gets bent or otherwise ruined you are looking at a maximum $20 part. Have a new tube on hand before removing the old one.

Dropping the oil pan is a much bigger job. Like burning your house down because you saw a spider.

I am surprised that the mechanics that Arkcon took the vehicle to originally did not do this.

Pretty slick! I imagine other forms of stick-um in the straw might work also.

That looks like a good idea to use a straw, but I’d worry about dropping that in as well. Instead of a straw, you could probably get some tubing from the hardware store in a longer length.

Exactly. The tool you’re looking for is a laparoscopic forcep.

But I’s till try removing the tube first.

One of my most used tools (I’m clumsy) is nut and bolt retriever - a powerful rare earth magnet on a telescoping shaft (think radio antenna).

Like this at Amazon.

The problems with a magnet are:

  1. It will be difficult, maybe impossible, to find one small enough to fit down the dipstick tube and at the same time be reliably retrievable;

  2. If there is one small enough to fit it’s unlikely to be powerful enough to pull the dipstick up against its friction inside the tube;

  3. If it were powerful enough it’s likely to be thwarted by the fact that tube is steel which will dissipate the magnetic attraction.

If someone can get that method to work, great! I will not be holding my breath, however.

I have one of those, it’s great. I was lucky enough to buy it a few days before I needed it. I dropped a screw somewhere really stupid. Like in between the cylinders on my motorcycle (not IN them, like down behind the carb or something). Somewhere that I probably could have gotten, or pushed it the rest of the way through, but it would have taken a while. With that it took about 2 seconds of blindly poking around.

Well, that’s just great, now I gotta buy another tool that I’ll carry around in my trunk for some day. It’s not even that expensive. Someone here (Gary?) mentioned in another thread a little flashlight on a small flexible head. I think he mentioned it in a thread about looking inside a door panel. Naturally I grabbed one the next time I saw it at Harbor Freight. It’s garbage because it’s from Harbor Freight, but I don’t even put it away, I must use it at least once a week. At some point I’ll pick up another one.
FYI, in Harbor Freight’s Defense I think I got a two pack for $10, one of them I already threw out.

I really liked that straw trick with 5 min epoxy instead of waiting all night.