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Bad piston rings allowing oil into the combustion chamber.
It is likely that the piston rings are bad, and the oil is getting into the combustion chamber. that is if it is burning oil.
A Bad Head Gasket, The Fuel in the combustion chamber can work its way into an oil jacket Even antifreeze in the head can seep into the combustion chamber or oil jackets or vise versa
If there is a fault and thus high current flow and thus the substantial heat generation results into boiling effect on oil and gas / bubble formation takes place with in the oil chamber that surge out of the chamber. This is sometimes referred to as surge in oil.
Yes, in the combustion chamber.
Oil can enter the piston chamber due to several factors, primarily through worn or damaged piston rings or cylinder walls, which can create gaps that allow oil to seep in. Additionally, a malfunctioning valve seal or excessive crankcase pressure can also lead to oil entering the combustion chamber. In some cases, improper maintenance or the use of incorrect oil viscosity can exacerbate these issues, contributing to oil contamination in the piston area.
Poor oil control-worn valve guides letting the oil into the combustion chamber.
To get lots of different oils from the main crude oil you must put it into a fractional distilaltion chamber.
no... for there to be white smoke there is water in your combustion chamber if there was too much oil it would be black smoke Black smoke is usually to much fuel and blueish white is oil. So yes it is possible that it is oil in the combustion chamber.
Put oil directly into the cylinder chamber. remove spark plug wire & spark plug. put oil in chamber & slowly turn the blade trying to free the engine piston.
Drain fuel. Then vent the chamber out with the discharge side of a shop vacuum for ten minutes or so. Refill with oil and the remaining fuel will evaporate over a short time with no bad effects.
Unbolt the burner and slide it out of the way.