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Old 11-16-2009, 11:40 PM
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Unhappy Please Help

I have been losing water alot. A couple of times my truck has overheated. I have heard so many things. When I add water to my truck, It starts to smoke blue?white smoke. And It is alittle hesitate. Is it the intake manifold gasket? How hard would it be to change it? Please email me at peh559@wmconnect.com. Any help will be greatly appreciated. This is my only way to work and I have 3 childs to support.I dont have the money to take it to a mechanic. Plus I like to do it myself if possible
 
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Old 11-17-2009, 12:00 AM
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I think it might be a head gasket, what kind of truck and engine, and how many miles are on it?
 
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Old 11-17-2009, 01:36 AM
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White smoke: White smoke is caused by water and or antifreeze entering the cylinder, and the engine trying to burn it with the fuel. The white smoke is steam. There are special gaskets (head gaskets are the primary gaskets) that keep the antifreeze from entering the cylinder area. The cylinder is where the fuel and air mixture are being compressed and burned. Any amount of antifreeze that enters this area will produce a white steam that will be present at the tailpipe area.

If white smoke is present, check to see if the proper amount of antifreeze is inside the radiator and the overflow bottle. Also check to see if antifreeze has contaminated the engine oil. You can look at the engine oil dipstick, or look at the under side of the engine oil filler cap. If the oil is contaminated with antifreeze, it will have the appearance of a chocolate milkshake. Do not start the engine if the oil is contaminated with antifreeze, as serious internal engine damage can result.

How did antifreeze get in the oil or cylinder in the first place? The engine probably overheated and a head gasket failed due to excessive heat, thus allowing antifreeze to enter the cylinder (Where it is not meant to be).

Blue Smoke: Blue smoke is caused by engine oil entering the cylinder area and being burned along with the fuel air mixture. As with the white smoke, just a small drop of oil leaking into the cylinder can produce blue smoke out the tailpipe. Blue smoke is more likely in older or higher mileage vehicles than newer cars with fewer miles.

How did the engine oil get inside the cylinder in the first place? The car has many seals, gaskets, and O-rings that are designed to keep the engine oil from entering the cylinder, and one of them has failed. If too much oil leaks into the cylinder and fouls the spark plug, it will cause a misfire (engine miss) in that cylinder, and the spark plug will have to be replaced or cleaned of the oil. Using thicker weight engine oil or an oil additive designed to reduce oil leaks might help reduce the amount of oil leaking into the cylinder.
 
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Old 11-17-2009, 08:14 PM
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It a 98 expedition eddie bauer 4X4. Its has the 5.4 engine
 
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Old 11-17-2009, 11:12 PM
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head gasket
 




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