Whoa, stop, reload.....
If you have lots of white SMOKE, not steam, then its not a head gasket. White smoke is oil, not water. You said you smelled coolant, which I assumed made it a head gasket. If you are dumping lots of oil into the combustion chamber, you are probably looking at a cracked ring.
If so, and the cylinder wall is not gouged, they usually are, you can replace just the one ring set without doing a rebuild.
That is not a fix by any means, just a bandaid. That motor is going to have to be rebuilt or replaced fairly soon. But if its your daily driver, and really has to run right now, you might be able to get a few thousand miles more on it that way.
Anybody here who is more familiar with this engine than me, help us out. Is there any way you can think of that oil could get into one side of his exhaust other than a ring?
EGR valve or PCV setup?
I am trying to think of anything less disastrous than a cracked ring he could look for.
OK, I wrote that part above, one handed, while tearing down an 8N Ford's hydraulic system, so I was a little distracted. Now, I am a lot greasier but not as distracted.
Before you do any major work, check the valve stem seals. With that many miles on the engine, the stem bushings are going to be worn. If you had a stem seal let go, its going to dump a lot of oil down around the valve stem.
If you are lucky enough for that to be the problem, its a fairly easy fix that does not involve major surgery. Just a new seal, an air hold chuck, and a valve spring compressor.
Make sure he checks the stem seals before he pulls the head.
J.
J.
If you have lots of white SMOKE, not steam, then its not a head gasket. White smoke is oil, not water. You said you smelled coolant, which I assumed made it a head gasket. If you are dumping lots of oil into the combustion chamber, you are probably looking at a cracked ring.
If so, and the cylinder wall is not gouged, they usually are, you can replace just the one ring set without doing a rebuild.
That is not a fix by any means, just a bandaid. That motor is going to have to be rebuilt or replaced fairly soon. But if its your daily driver, and really has to run right now, you might be able to get a few thousand miles more on it that way.
Anybody here who is more familiar with this engine than me, help us out. Is there any way you can think of that oil could get into one side of his exhaust other than a ring?
EGR valve or PCV setup?
I am trying to think of anything less disastrous than a cracked ring he could look for.
OK, I wrote that part above, one handed, while tearing down an 8N Ford's hydraulic system, so I was a little distracted. Now, I am a lot greasier but not as distracted.
Before you do any major work, check the valve stem seals. With that many miles on the engine, the stem bushings are going to be worn. If you had a stem seal let go, its going to dump a lot of oil down around the valve stem.
If you are lucky enough for that to be the problem, its a fairly easy fix that does not involve major surgery. Just a new seal, an air hold chuck, and a valve spring compressor.
Make sure he checks the stem seals before he pulls the head.
J.
J.
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. The more I think about it, the more I think it's steam. Just didn't really seem to dissipate when I looked in the rear view mirror. But, also checked my coolant level and the radiator is bout dry and the oil looks fine and is still good so I think it's gotta be a head gasket. But gonna drop off my k5 tomorrow at his shop so he can have it first thing monday morning. I'll let y'all know what he says