Posted December 24, 200915 yr i have a 2006 ram 3500 4x4 with51,000 miles and when i drive over 70 mph i have blow by bad any suggestions
December 24, 200915 yr Owner Welcome to my humble little site! Check your vacuum lines... If you vacuum lines are leaking it will turn the vacuum pump into a air compressor. Then is the crankcase vent plugged at all? You might think about doing a compression test...
December 24, 200915 yr How do you know you have blowby at or over 70 mph? Maybe I don't want to know.......You either have a long neck or the vent tube exiting at the windshield.:p
December 26, 200915 yr Author no i dont have a long neck lol i just have oil all under my truck , and thanks for the replies ill check the vaccum
December 27, 200915 yr no i dont have a long neck lol i just have oil all under my truck , and thanks for the replies ill check the vaccum That oil helps prevent rust and corrosion. Seriously, a certain amount of blow by is normal. Both my truck and the wife's create enough blow by to cause some "custom undercoating" of the front axle and a little bit near the back and under side of the oil pan with some occassional spatterings of the rear axle (very rare). Do you have the OEM blow by slobber bottle or have you extended the engine breather hose so it vents in front of the front axle like I did ours with some PVC pipe and flexible hose?
December 28, 200915 yr That oil could be coming from a few other places.............leaking pan gasket, front cover area, rear seal etc. If your truck is running good and getting decent mileage, it's probably not blow by. By the way, I extended my breather tube about 5-6 inches with a brass double ended hose nipple and piece of hose just to keep any drips off the bottom of the truck.
January 3, 201015 yr jturner, Figure it out yet?I have an '06 too, buy haven't had it long enough to compare.There are many cases I know of personally where thinner weight oil caused more usage, but that is different than a gasket leak. (if that is the case)
January 3, 201015 yr Check for fuel in oil, I've had two CR trucks with oil spread out under truck due to "ruptured" injectors diluting oil.
January 4, 201015 yr Owner Good suggestion with CR trucks... Take a drop of oil and place it on a piece of white paper and let it sit awhile. If a clear ring forms around the oil drop then there is fuel in the oil.
January 4, 201015 yr If you have injectors leaking, wouldn't you be have an unusual amount of black exhaust smoke? IE: extremely rich.
January 4, 201015 yr If you have injectors leaking, wouldn't you be have an unusual amount of black exhaust smoke? IE: extremely rich.only if the leak is in the cylinder
January 4, 201015 yr only if the leak is in the cylinderAre you saying these injectors are exposed to the crankcase and not just the combustion chamber?
January 4, 201015 yr If an injector body cracks it can get fuel into the crankcase. Rare but does happen with power adding pressure boxes.
January 4, 201015 yr Owner If you have injectors leaking, wouldn't you be have an unusual amount of black exhaust smoke? IE: extremely rich. No actually you get a lot of white smoke of unburnt fuel. Because the common rail is always charged with fuel pressure so if there is a injector leak its sprays fuel constantly all the itime through the cycles (intake, compression, exhaust). Since this is possible if the injector is leaking during intake the boost pressure will push the fuel pash the rings and hence fuel in the oil. At close to 30,000 PSI 3rd gen injectors don't hold up very well at times. I've heard of tips breaking, pintles galling up and seizeing open, bodies cracking up the shank of them, etc. Here I know this is 24V VP44 injectors but notice the top of the injector is still poking out of the head. They never truely go all the way in... Hence why the injectors got a o-ring on it. http://forum.mopar1973man.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=158&stc=1&d=1262614547 http://forum.mopar1973man.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=159&stc=1&d=1262614733 Now the only difference between both injectors is that the 3rd gen's are electronic fired over pressure fired. Now looking back at yester-year and seeing what a VE pump maxed out at was 17,550 PSI and popped at 3,500 PSI on the injectors. We've come a long ways and we are just pushing the limits of the parts... Edited January 4, 201015 yr by Mopar1973Man
January 7, 201015 yr Thanks for the clarification pics Michael. I have not been into a 5.9 before. But,,,,rich diesel burns black smoke and lean is white.I would speculate if that much fuel was getting by the rings, you'd wear them out from cylinder wash.Could they leak into the rocker arm area?
January 7, 201015 yr Actually too much atomized fuel with not enough air smokes black. Too much unatomized raw fuel leaking or dripping "From a bad injector" into a cylinder or a really cold or low compression engine smokes white. And yes too much raw fuel will wash the cylinder walls and cause a scored piston bore and or melt/erode a piston. and yes if an O-ring is bad or a cracked injector body happens it can leak up through the top of the head into the crankcase. Edited January 7, 201015 yr by Wild and Free
January 7, 201015 yr Ah, you are right. It would act as if it were cold and be hardly burnt. Same results as a broken quill shaft in a detroit choking the air from the cylinders. (no air, same as too much unburnt fuel)
i have a 2006 ram 3500 4x4 with51,000 miles and when i drive over 70 mph i have blow by bad any suggestions