First thing is to find out where the oil is coming from. You do this be carefully examining the wetness. Assuming that the oil will flow toward the ground due to gravity, you can assume that when you find the top of the wetness you have found the source of the leak. Since your question does not specify if it's the engine or the transmission or the rear end or the front end or some other component that is leaking I must simply assume that the engine is leaking. Check for the most common leakers, the valve cover gaskets and the intake manifold gasket.
It is probably the oil cooler lines.
You have a small "EVAP" leak. Start with replacing the fuel cap.
Need to know the location of the vacuum leak in order to answer this.
A vacuum leak could do that, also low fuel pressure or a dirty fuel filter.
no get rid of it they usually leak
Does not use Freon. Uses R-134. Take it to an A/C expert, where they will find the leak and repair before recharging the system. It is illegal to add refrigerant without fixing the leak.
Head gasket or cracked head. Mo
Check for vacuum leak
Could be several reasons, need to know aprox where it is leaking from.
That depends on where the oil leak is, is it in the motor self or is one of the seals leaking?
I have a leak on my drive shaft left front 2000 cheve Blazer I would like to replace the whole unit
small evap leak, check the fuel cap, if it is not loose, replace it.