Smoke on start up

Submitted: Friday, Nov 04, 2005 at 05:37
ThreadID: 27810 Views:3508 Replies:4 FollowUps:3
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I have a 1997 2.8 Patrol. When I start it in the morning there is a cloud of white/blue smoke from the back. It clears after a couple of seconds. Is this normal? A Landrover of mine used to do it. What is this smoke a symptom of and should I worry? Thanks, Jim
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Reply By: Wayne (NSW) - Friday, Nov 04, 2005 at 07:08

Friday, Nov 04, 2005 at 07:08
Jambobwana,

This is a very common with Patrols and other vehicles that may have a few k's on the clock.

If it is blue/white smoke that would be oil. Over night oil would have run down the side of the bore and when the motor is stared the oil is burnt off.

The fix would be to replace the rings and hone the bore, but until the compression gets really low it would not be worth the expense.

If the smoke was black that would be fuel and that could be a leaking injector.

Wayne
AnswerID: 137713

Follow Up By: keny - Friday, Nov 04, 2005 at 07:21

Friday, Nov 04, 2005 at 07:21
jambobwana

is it diesel or petrol
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Follow Up By: Member - Chrispy (NSW) - Friday, Nov 04, 2005 at 08:00

Friday, Nov 04, 2005 at 08:00
It's a 2.8 - therefore T/diesel. The only petrols available were 4.2 or 3.0 litres.

My 4.2 T/D did this every morning too..balack smoke for a few secondss...especially if you depress the accelerator halfway like it says to in the original owners handbook. I had my injectors serviced recently by a good diesel mechanic, and the problem went away.

No smoke on startup now :)
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Follow Up By: colin - Saturday, Nov 05, 2005 at 08:04

Saturday, Nov 05, 2005 at 08:04
the mq has a petrol non turbo 2.8 same as the skyline runs , man do they love to rev, col
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Reply By: traveller2 - Friday, Nov 04, 2005 at 08:15

Friday, Nov 04, 2005 at 08:15
A puf of blue smoke on startup can also be unburnt diesel due to a dead glowplug as the fuel in the affected cylinder will not be burnt correctly.
Relatively easy to check the glowplugs, remove the busbar connecting them all, test each one with a test lamp or multimeter connected to the battery. The one (or more)that shows no lamp or reading on the meter is 'kangaroo edward' as they say. You will probably find as the weather warms up that it becomes less of a problem which will become more pronounced at the onset of winter.
AnswerID: 137717

Reply By: Tanka - Friday, Nov 04, 2005 at 18:04

Friday, Nov 04, 2005 at 18:04
G'day,
Does the truck use oil excessively??? Generally diesel smoke falls into 3 categories.

1- White Smoke - Poor heat in cylinder, Lack of compression.
2- Blue Smoke - Oil burning, caused by cylinder blow-by, leaking valve stem seals, Leaking turbo seals etc.
3- Black Smoke - Overfueling, caused by leaking injectors, incorrectly timed or adjusted fuel pump etc.

If the truck is not using oil, the first thing I would check is mentioned above (Glowplugs). If these test OK you should get a compression test.

Tanka.
AnswerID: 137824

Reply By: WheelTravel - Friday, Nov 04, 2005 at 19:04

Friday, Nov 04, 2005 at 19:04
Could be as simple as your air filter needs replacing. The smoke you are describing is definately unburnt diesel. If there isn't enuf oxygen getting in... then this is exactly what happens/

AnswerID: 137832

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