Rajo Accessory Curiosity

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RecklessKelly
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Rajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by RecklessKelly » Sun Jan 26, 2025 10:40 am

I noticed this Rajo oil accessory on a car listing and was curious, what it would be for? An oil level indicator?
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Last edited by RecklessKelly on Sat Feb 01, 2025 3:08 pm, edited 2 times in total.


Bill Anziani
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Re: Ajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by Bill Anziani » Sun Jan 26, 2025 11:09 am

Yes. It checks the oil level. Tim Morsher was at one time reproducing them. Don't know if he is still making them

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RajoRacer
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Re: Ajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by RajoRacer » Sun Jan 26, 2025 11:17 am

RAJO manufactured them along with an accessory overhead valve cylinder head.

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Charlie B in N.J.
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Re: Ajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by Charlie B in N.J. » Sun Jan 26, 2025 11:33 am

How about telling us how it works?
Forget everything you thought you knew.


Rich P. Bingham
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Re: Ajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by Rich P. Bingham » Sun Jan 26, 2025 11:55 am

So that would be “Rajo”, not Ajo ?

(Ajo in Spanish is garlic. Maybe run your T on garlic oil ?
:lol: )
Get a horse !

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Re: Ajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by RajoRacer » Sun Jan 26, 2025 11:56 am

It uses a cork float.

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Pep C Strebeck
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Re: Ajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by Pep C Strebeck » Sun Jan 26, 2025 12:19 pm

Charlie B in N.J. wrote:
Sun Jan 26, 2025 11:33 am
How about telling us how it works?
As stated, there is a float inside the casting. The top of the indicator replaces one of the pan bolts and there is a wire attached to the float with a small ball on the end of it that can be seen in the engine compartment. Like any of the sight-glass indicators or the APCO indicator, they replace the lower petcock and give you a static/non-running oil level.

I had one of the sight-glass level indicators decades ago and if I hadn't been looking in the rear view mirror at the right moment it would have been a disaster for sure. The glass had broken and I was leaving a healthy trail of oil. Off the car it came and into the junk box (still sits there to this day).I still have an indicator gauge but now I use an APCO like the one pictured below, instead of replacing one of the pan bolts, it mounts to it with the bracket that is shown (a part that is often if not always missing when found):


apco.jpg
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Re: Ajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by TRDxB2 » Sun Jan 26, 2025 1:05 pm

RecklessKelly wrote:
Sun Jan 26, 2025 10:40 am
I noticed this Ajo oil accessory on a car listing and was curious, what it would be for? An oil level indicator?
None listed on Tom's eBay store https://www.ebay.com.sg/sch/i.html?_dkr ... ent&_oac=1
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RecklessKelly
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Re: Ajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by RecklessKelly » Sun Jan 26, 2025 3:31 pm

Interesting piece. I guess the Rajo R was hidden in the screenshot. Like most T improvements, there are good but bad points to them.


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Re: Ajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by Rich P. Bingham » Sun Jan 26, 2025 4:14 pm

John, your comment reminded me of a friend of mine who “specialized” in 12 cylinder Lincolns. They had a float gauge for checking the static crank-case oil level, which he lamented, wishing they had never used. In his experience, the Lincoln motors were generally in very poor condition which he attributed to the fact that unlike owners who relied on a dip-stick, Lincoln owners never saw how black and filthy their oil was becoming, and tended to delay or forget regular oil changes, just adding oil as needed to maintain the level. :lol: I’m pretty sure there’s a lot to that !
Get a horse !


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RecklessKelly
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Re: Ajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by RecklessKelly » Sun Jan 26, 2025 7:58 pm

Yes Rich, not seeing the oil condition can lead to a false sense of security. My Maxwell has a gauge and a filler hole with a hinged cover, the oil cant be seen.

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Mark Gregush
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Re: Ajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by Mark Gregush » Thu Jan 30, 2025 6:00 pm

Rich P. Bingham wrote:
Sun Jan 26, 2025 4:14 pm
John, your comment reminded me of a friend of mine who “specialized” in 12 cylinder Lincolns. They had a float gauge for checking the static crank-case oil level, which he lamented, wishing they had never used. In his experience, the Lincoln motors were generally in very poor condition which he attributed to the fact that unlike owners who relied on a dip-stick, Lincoln owners never saw how black and filthy their oil was becoming, and tended to delay or forget regular oil changes, just adding oil as needed to maintain the level. :lol: I’m pretty sure there’s a lot to that !
Up to around 1927 Dodge Brothers used a float also, very true about not knowing how bad the oil is till you drain it.
I know the voices aren't real but damn they have some good ideas! :shock:

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RecklessKelly
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Re: Ajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by RecklessKelly » Fri Jan 31, 2025 8:03 am

I change the oil in all of my engines once a year just for good measures. I'm not sure how accurate the Maxwell float is but it I can feel resistance of the oil when I move the pointer. Its a major oil leak point, I need to pull the oil pan soon and seal the shaft somehow.


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Re: Ajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by ModelTWoods » Fri Jan 31, 2025 12:01 pm

Rich P. Bingham wrote:
Sun Jan 26, 2025 11:55 am
So that would be “Rajo”, not Ajo ?

(Ajo in Spanish is garlic. Maybe run your T on garlic oil ?
:lol: )
I suspect you are "spot on" in your assumption.


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Re: Rajo Accessory Curiosity

Post by RecklessKelly » Sat Feb 01, 2025 3:11 pm

Its cheaper than snake oil.

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