Dsilverline
Member
- 51
- 30
- 18
- Location
- Crestline, Ca.
Hey guys,
This is my first post but I've been reading for a while. Been troubleshooting white smoke on my CUCV since freaking August!
In August she totally crapped out on me, lost all power and it wouldn't stay running.
Things I did after that:
electric fuel pump add
fuel filter
clear return line to IP to look for bubbles
new injector return lines
new injection pump
new injectors
After all that stuff she'd stay running with mild white smoke out of *both* exhausts at idle, when i rev it quick and hard it'll belch a ton of smoke, smells more like unburnt diesel to me but my sense of smell sucks. If I rev it up slowly the smoke actually goes away somewhat.
I then suspected it could be a bad head gasket/cracked block (seemed unlikely since it was on both sides and exhaust smelled more like fuel) and did the radiator exhaust gas test twice which showed negative for exhaust gases in the coolant system. Then I did a compression check on all cylinders and my readings were 350-400 across the board.
Then decided it could be a worn out timing set, took it all apart and put on a new timing chain (the old one *was* pretty loose), replaced the water pump and radiator while I was at it. Rotating the IP either way made very little difference.
Its doing exactly the same thing now- but I will say the throttle response is amazingly improved! I'm starting to think maybe a cracked block or indeed head gaskets that aren't showing up on the tests. I've been doing all my smoke testing with the manifold off as you can run it that way and less work if I need to pull the heads. At one point I thought maybe the manifold has to be on to avoid smoke issues (don't see why it would make a difference, but just to be sure I slapped it on temp style and it didn't make a difference)
I didn't technically put the manifold back on with the gaskets and torque everything properly though. Is the situation you can technically run the motor with the manifold off but it needs to be on completely to run properly? I know the manifold blocks the two exhaust ports but don't see why that would matter.
Thanks for reading guys, just trying to get some info before I blindly decide to pull the heads (also I don't really want to haha)
Daver
This is my first post but I've been reading for a while. Been troubleshooting white smoke on my CUCV since freaking August!
In August she totally crapped out on me, lost all power and it wouldn't stay running.
Things I did after that:
electric fuel pump add
fuel filter
clear return line to IP to look for bubbles
new injector return lines
new injection pump
new injectors
After all that stuff she'd stay running with mild white smoke out of *both* exhausts at idle, when i rev it quick and hard it'll belch a ton of smoke, smells more like unburnt diesel to me but my sense of smell sucks. If I rev it up slowly the smoke actually goes away somewhat.
I then suspected it could be a bad head gasket/cracked block (seemed unlikely since it was on both sides and exhaust smelled more like fuel) and did the radiator exhaust gas test twice which showed negative for exhaust gases in the coolant system. Then I did a compression check on all cylinders and my readings were 350-400 across the board.
Then decided it could be a worn out timing set, took it all apart and put on a new timing chain (the old one *was* pretty loose), replaced the water pump and radiator while I was at it. Rotating the IP either way made very little difference.
Its doing exactly the same thing now- but I will say the throttle response is amazingly improved! I'm starting to think maybe a cracked block or indeed head gaskets that aren't showing up on the tests. I've been doing all my smoke testing with the manifold off as you can run it that way and less work if I need to pull the heads. At one point I thought maybe the manifold has to be on to avoid smoke issues (don't see why it would make a difference, but just to be sure I slapped it on temp style and it didn't make a difference)
I didn't technically put the manifold back on with the gaskets and torque everything properly though. Is the situation you can technically run the motor with the manifold off but it needs to be on completely to run properly? I know the manifold blocks the two exhaust ports but don't see why that would matter.
Thanks for reading guys, just trying to get some info before I blindly decide to pull the heads (also I don't really want to haha)
Daver