blacklake
Member
- Joined
- July 21, 2005
- Messages
- 23
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- New York
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 93' explorer
1993 Explorer Eddie Bauer
K&N air filter
A/C delete
230,000 mi.
Automatic Transmission
Stock
I will try not to make this too long/wordy, but I am really stumped her folks, need a little help.
I wanted to get my explorer ready for a long hard winter here in NY, so I figured a few replacement parts would be a good thing. This all started because my radiator had a small leak in the top and never really held pressure that well.
First steps:
Drain old coolant and run a prestone radiator flush. I drove it around the block a few times despite the label saying to idle the engine. I left the cleaner in for a day or two while it was in the driveway. Drained and flushed with plain water a few times. I ran then explorer with plain water for a day because I was skeptical that it would leak else where. Seemed fine, so I added new coolant and distilled water. the next day there is a leak from the timing chain cover... a bad leak. Here is a picture of the gasket.
Fixed that. I drive the explorer to the gas station and fill it up. I get back and the intake gasket is leaking freely it looks like this.
you may have noticed that in both cases the gasket looks fine (great I might add for being 20 years old) BUT the gasket is severly degraded around the coolant ports. I feel like I must have done something wrong to cause these two gaskets to fail back to back. time for a new intake gasket, I figure while I am in there why not clean the fuel injectors by following this method.
Reassemble.
I am getting smoke out of the tail pipe. It smells strongly of raw fuel!!! I realize I messed up an injector. So the injectors come back out, the offending one replaced.
Reassemble.
The engine sounds awesome! But wait, after 5 min of idling I am starting to see smoke again! I check all engine codes. Sure enough I have a lean oxygen sensor. Ah Ha that is causing the smoking after the computer goes into closed loop it reads a lean O2 and adds too much fuel.
Replace O2 sensor and Reassemble.
I idle it again runs even better, but there is still smoke after 5 mins. So I go on a mass diagnostics frenzy because I suspect a blown head gasket (after seeing the other gaskets.
After all that I thought the head gasket was blown. So I bought new gaskets and head bolts. This is the most suspect region I could find. Notice the brownish color were the steel ring seats. (don't worry I cleaned that carbon out of the cylinder)
This is both head gaskets. Over all nothing seemed horrible about them to me.
So I did a major cleaning. Against everything I have read from this forum I reused my old heads! I did an inspection for cracks in the usual locations (between valves, between coolant ports) I didn't see any with the naked eye, but I am imperfect and there very well could have been a crack.
I installed the new head gasket and bolts
Reassemble
Now I still have the exact same smoking problem as before. Are my heads cracked? Can any one think of a diagnostic test I should run?
My justification for using the old heads was that they worked for 230,000 miles (most of the time with the radiator half empty) they should work through the winter. Since I have had these problems I have not over heated the engine, nor has it ever over heated in the past. By my estimation I have invested >$800 in maintenance items in the last 6 months that includes brand new tires. So I would like to get it running so I don't have to swallow that expense. At the same time investing $400 for new heads doesn't sound appealing considering how rusty my body is getting and the 230,000 miles on the transmission and engine...
K&N air filter
A/C delete
230,000 mi.
Automatic Transmission
Stock
I will try not to make this too long/wordy, but I am really stumped her folks, need a little help.
I wanted to get my explorer ready for a long hard winter here in NY, so I figured a few replacement parts would be a good thing. This all started because my radiator had a small leak in the top and never really held pressure that well.
First steps:
Drain old coolant and run a prestone radiator flush. I drove it around the block a few times despite the label saying to idle the engine. I left the cleaner in for a day or two while it was in the driveway. Drained and flushed with plain water a few times. I ran then explorer with plain water for a day because I was skeptical that it would leak else where. Seemed fine, so I added new coolant and distilled water. the next day there is a leak from the timing chain cover... a bad leak. Here is a picture of the gasket.
Fixed that. I drive the explorer to the gas station and fill it up. I get back and the intake gasket is leaking freely it looks like this.
you may have noticed that in both cases the gasket looks fine (great I might add for being 20 years old) BUT the gasket is severly degraded around the coolant ports. I feel like I must have done something wrong to cause these two gaskets to fail back to back. time for a new intake gasket, I figure while I am in there why not clean the fuel injectors by following this method.
Reassemble.
I am getting smoke out of the tail pipe. It smells strongly of raw fuel!!! I realize I messed up an injector. So the injectors come back out, the offending one replaced.
Reassemble.
The engine sounds awesome! But wait, after 5 min of idling I am starting to see smoke again! I check all engine codes. Sure enough I have a lean oxygen sensor. Ah Ha that is causing the smoking after the computer goes into closed loop it reads a lean O2 and adds too much fuel.
Replace O2 sensor and Reassemble.
I idle it again runs even better, but there is still smoke after 5 mins. So I go on a mass diagnostics frenzy because I suspect a blown head gasket (after seeing the other gaskets.
- No KOEO or KOER or continuous error codes I get all 111 pass codes
- Compression tests all cylinders fall in range of 173-185 psi
- Spark plugs are not wet or oily (but they are black from the o2 sensor failure)
- Dipstick not milky (brand new oil <20 mi)
- Pressure test coolant system @ 10.5 psi reads 10 psi after 20 min.
- Pressure test coolant system with warm engine slightly faster drop maybe 1psi per 20 min.
- hold pressure on coolant system for 1 hr. then check for a wet cylinder. no cylinders are wet...
- Test fuel pressure regulator. 35psi running 40 psi once you unplug vac line. holds fuel pressure indefinably once you shut engine off.
- No air bubbles in radiator cap when idling/smoking.
- disconnected PCV... still smokes
- Checked auto trans vac modulator (new 2 yrs ago) does not appear to be bad
- I am having a difficult time identifying the smell of the smoke. It is white/greyish. It doesn't smell sweet, but it is certainly not foul like oil smoke. It doesn't burn my eyes at all. I thought that burning coolant (actually mostly steam) dissipates quickly. This smoke does not dissipate quickly (a few times the neighbors thought they needed to call the fire department!!!)
After all that I thought the head gasket was blown. So I bought new gaskets and head bolts. This is the most suspect region I could find. Notice the brownish color were the steel ring seats. (don't worry I cleaned that carbon out of the cylinder)
This is both head gaskets. Over all nothing seemed horrible about them to me.
So I did a major cleaning. Against everything I have read from this forum I reused my old heads! I did an inspection for cracks in the usual locations (between valves, between coolant ports) I didn't see any with the naked eye, but I am imperfect and there very well could have been a crack.
I installed the new head gasket and bolts
Reassemble
Now I still have the exact same smoking problem as before. Are my heads cracked? Can any one think of a diagnostic test I should run?
My justification for using the old heads was that they worked for 230,000 miles (most of the time with the radiator half empty) they should work through the winter. Since I have had these problems I have not over heated the engine, nor has it ever over heated in the past. By my estimation I have invested >$800 in maintenance items in the last 6 months that includes brand new tires. So I would like to get it running so I don't have to swallow that expense. At the same time investing $400 for new heads doesn't sound appealing considering how rusty my body is getting and the 230,000 miles on the transmission and engine...