Jcorstorphine
Well-Known Member
Following a series of disasters with my Ford XLD diesel engine last season, I finally got it running perfectly after a head refurbishment and a reconditioned fuel injection pump. At the beginning of the season, the engine started without any trace of smoke but now after only about 30 to 40 hours running, it emits blue smoke on start up and runs roughly to start with.
The smoke is not lube oil as it has a distinctive smell of badly combusted diesel and clears after a few blips on the throttle.
I thought it may have been a defective glow plug but these all give continuity on my multimeter.
I have tried to assess, the compression of each cylinder by turning the engine with a socket and there does appear to be one which is lower than the rest. However, if I open the camshaft oil filler cap, there is no sign of any blow back of fumes up through the oil galleries.
If it is not the compression and is not the glow plugs, that only leaves either a faulty injector or a leaking valve but the head was fully reconditioned at the end of last year.
I have also tried the technique of slackening off the fuel lines to the injectors one by one but that was not very conclusive.
Any thoughts.
jc
One day I will have an engine which runs for a complete season without a major strip down!
The smoke is not lube oil as it has a distinctive smell of badly combusted diesel and clears after a few blips on the throttle.
I thought it may have been a defective glow plug but these all give continuity on my multimeter.
I have tried to assess, the compression of each cylinder by turning the engine with a socket and there does appear to be one which is lower than the rest. However, if I open the camshaft oil filler cap, there is no sign of any blow back of fumes up through the oil galleries.
If it is not the compression and is not the glow plugs, that only leaves either a faulty injector or a leaking valve but the head was fully reconditioned at the end of last year.
I have also tried the technique of slackening off the fuel lines to the injectors one by one but that was not very conclusive.
Any thoughts.
jc
One day I will have an engine which runs for a complete season without a major strip down!