Replacing the seal is the only good, permanent way. The seal is old, cracked and leaking.
Go to mechanic. Typically, If the emissions are blue you are burning oil. Oil is probably getting past the piston rings.
Blue smoke out tailpipe is common for oil getting in combustion chamber. It means you can have bad valve seals, easy to fix, or oil is slipping past rings, much more extensive and expensive.
The past participle of "smoke" is "smoked."
If it has some blue in it, that usually means the valve guides are getting hard. When you shut the engine off, oil will seep past the hardened valve guides into the combustion chambers and when you start it up, cold ,the oil has to burn off. If the blue smoke last longer than a minute or two you may be looking at a different problem.
Does is smoke when it starts and then stop, or smoke all the time
The white smoke is oil, probably getting past the rings or the valve stem seals or both. Running an engine at high RPM too much or not changing the oil at normal intervals can cause problems like that. Black smoke is generally caused by an engine that is getting too much fuel.
== == Eminem used to do smoke in the past, like marijuana, but he doesn't smoke anymore. Not marijuana or cigarettes.
If it's coming out of your exhaust pipe it means that you are burning oil, which means that your piston ring inside your engine block is worn, oil is getting past the ring and getting into the combustion chamber where the fuel and air mixture should be the only 2 things that are in there, oil burns from the flame front when the spark plug ignites the air/fuel mixture
apparently, he use to smoke in the past, but has quit because of his career
possible worn rings, blue smoke is normally associated with unburned oil seeeping past piston & ring,and escaping through exhaust.
If it only occurs when the engine is cold or the weather is extremely cold, be suspicious of water vapor... it's a natural occurance during the combustion process. If the white vapor goes away when the engine warms up, no problem. If the smoke is blue-ish, it's probably engine oil. Check to see if you're getting fuel into the oil. That can cause the oil to thin and get past the rings, then the motor oil doesn't burn as cleanly and can leave the blue/grey smoke. That can be caused by dirty injectors that do not vaporize the fuel but sends it out in a stream, then the liquid fuel seeps past the rings to mix with the oil.
You Also Could Have Broken Piston Rings Causing Lots Of BlowBy. This Increases Pressure In The Oil Pan Causing This Problen Inside The Valve Pan. Also Try Replacing Your PCV Valve & See If This Helps. If Not You Engine Probable Needs A Rebuild Minute amounts of oil can seep from the valve cover gaskets and onto the exhaust manifolds and the resulting smoke will travel upwards past the valve covers making them appear to smoke