blown head gasket or cracked block blown head gasket or cracked block
The tail pipe is part of the exhaust system.
If you follow the exhaust tubing that leads from the engine. It is located after the exhaust manifold and after the next pipe is bolted together. Sowhere in this area you will find one. It might have just one or it will have one coming off each exhaust header side. It just depends on the model year. Some models have one after the catalytic convertor also. Again this depends on the year. The O2 sensor will be screwed into the exhaust tubing and will have an electrical connection connected to it. If you are replacing this then spray penetrating oil on it first and let it set awhile then undo the connector and uncrew it from the pipe. Hope this helps.
Yes, a certain amount of water (not coolant) will drip out the tail pipe from the process of condensation.
That's exactly what it is, water. The products of combustion are water and carbon dioxide. While the exhaust stays hot the water comes out as high temperature steam, usually you don't even notice it. When the exhaust pipe and/or outside temperature is cold enough the exhaust will cool and some of the water vapor will condense into steam and possibly even water that drips from a weep hole in the muffler. If you're seeing a little water drip from the muffler, everything is working as designed.
The only water that should be leaking from an automobile would be from the condensation drain for the Air Conditioning or from condensation out the exhaust pipe.
Nothing
go to the back of the truck and find the exhaust pipe, point a flash light into the pipe. they are at the end of the pipe
Do not breathe from a tail pipe. Exhaust fumes contain many componentst that will kill you if to much is inhaled.
moisture builds up in there it happens no big deal Water is a byproduct of combustion which is expelled with the exhaust. -LubeExpert
Not much. When the exhaust pipe is cold, water vapor will condense as the exhaust cools on the pipe. After the pipe heats up, the vapor will not condense. Remember that the combustion of hydrocarbon fuel produces both carbon dioxide AND water vapor as a normal part of the process. All gasoline engines produce water vapor and all water vapor condenses if the exhaust pipe is cool.
Water comes out of all tailpipes no matter how minimal. The combustion reaction of burning gasoline (C8H18) and oxygen (02) produces carbon exhaust (Cx) and water (h20) thus leaving water in your tailpipe. Water can also appear in an exhaust pipe due to condensation. Water in an exhaust pipe is perfectly normal and is of no harm to your vehicle, or any vehicle.
Yes.
It is in the exhaust pipe up by the engine exhaust manifolds.
EGR (Exhaust Gas Recirculation) look for it to be attached to the exhaust manifold or a pipe from the exhaust manifold
To dump the exhaust on a truck you first need to cut off the straight pipes that make up this system. You can then attach a curved pipe to direct the exhaust downward from the vehicle instead using a tailpipe.
It get burned off, idiot!
An exhaust pipe is used to excrete the co2 from the gas that has been burned in the engine it is usually snakes to thw back or side of the truck so that it is out of the way. If you get a bigger exhaust pipe than the stock one you can usually get some more power from your engine. You can also get an exhaust kit with a switch the can change the amount of exhaust exiting the pipes.