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Burning Oil
- Thread starter lthom
- Start date
Guest
New member
I'm trying to think of the exhaust routing on the S2 as I type... maybe a leak from the head/cam area onto the manifold?
sawood12
New member
Guest
New member
Are you sure it is burning and not leaking? A small amount of oil burned makes a huge amount of blue smoke - if the car is drinking it and only burning then it will live in a constant blue cloud.
Oli.
Northern924
New member
These cars aren't quite old enough or harsh enough to have to start using 20/50, but they were designed to run on mineral oil and if the 10/40 you are using is semi or fully synthetic you're just going to add to the problem
This after all is just my personal opinion and I know there will be peopel happily running on these oil, but one of the most important things to ask is how many miles a month does the car do a month? A car that does 2/300 miles a month is going to take 3-4 months before it will need a pint of oil.
If like me your's is a daily drive and covering around 1000 miles a month you'll be using a pint of oil a month, this is perfectly in guidance with what they were using when new! Anything more than that and you should be looking to change it.
Oil of choice for me is Castrol GTX High Mileage 15W-40
Copperman05
New member
Edd
:Edited for bad spelling.
Bob
New member
ORIGINAL: Copperman05
Seems to be alot of mis-information on oil going around and around.... I get quite annoyed by it all...[]
Me too.
A 10w mineral oil and a 10w synthetic oil are the same viscosity when cold, that's what the 10w means.
The synthetic version will resist breaking down under extreme heat better than the mineral version - that's the difference
Copperman05
New member
Edd
Northern924
New member
I've always used mineral oils in older engines, not a mechanic but as the engine wears you've more chance of losing/burning up more oil. Yes these are high performance enignes but the 20+ year old as well.
As I keep saying its all down to personal choice I always used cheap thick supermarket oil in my n/a '24s and they were very happy on it, the 924S had GTX HM and used around a litre every 1000 miles.
My '44 has done 163k so there's no way I'd use a modern oil in it, I've done just over 1k since I went back on the road and I've just topped it up, 3/4 litre so I'm very happy with GTX HM.
Its right synthetic oils don't break down as quick and are recommended, but a mineral oil will be thick and with the right additives provide extra protection to old engines.
Its really hard to say what is right for cars of this age, I'm happy with mine, other people are very happy using synthetic.[
If she drinks oil and she isn't leaking then she must be burning it. As a rule of thumb, smoke on acceleration = rings or bores, smoke on overrun and startup = valve seals or guides, although there could be other faults like crankcase breathers. Sometimes you can see the smoke better at night in the headlights of the car behind.
I use Mobil super S 10w40 as it was recommended by a couple of independent specialists for older engines and is cheaper than fully synthetic.
chrisg
Member
by default there's only 2 places where oil can get into the cylinder, down through the valves/ guides or up through the piston rings.
What is the oil usage like ? 944's do burn/ leak a reasonable amount of oil. You might actually find its just the valve stem oil seals that have hardened up with time and continued exposure to oil = not uncommon.
Chris
PSH
PCGB Member
Are you sure it's white smoke?... white is water thus head gasket issues while blue is oil so valve seals or rings. Is there any sign of the oil or water being contaminated? Even if there isn't it's possible that your head gasket is only just beginning to fail and due to the extra heat generated during a track day it's started to show. Let's hope it is water and the HG as it's a lot cheaper to fix than oil related problems.
regards
Pete
have a word with Kevin or Alex at EMC they are very reasonable hey could put you on the right track?
Gerry
944 man
Active member
As Pete has said, white smoke isnt oil, but this probably isnt a disaster.
bmnelsc
New member
ORIGINAL: Hilux
Just a thought - the oil/water intercooler interface could be breached?
IMHO this wouldn't result in oil or water in the combustion chamber which must be happening for exhaust smoke. If oil and water is mixing it would show up as oil in the coolant and/or milky foamy sludge in the oil. If this is happening - it must be corrected ASAP as anti-freeze destroys bearings and therefore the crank/rods and cams are at risk.
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