Drain it out and put the correct amount in
You probably spilled some oil on or near the engine, making it burn when the engine heats up.
If you have over filled your engine oil, it will not "leak" unless you have completely filled the engine with oil and is pouring out where you put it in. However overfilling even as much as little as 1 quart can lead to catostophic engine damage as the crankshaft will spin into the oil in the pan causing it to foam and cause oil circulation problems throughout the engine leading to overheating and engine siezing.
Remove the drain plug under the engine and remove oil until it is at the proper level. Running the engine with too much oil can cause damage.
Someone could of thrown oil on it other wise your oil is filled up above the fill line and oil is running it parts of your engine it shouldn't check your spark plugs is the easiest way to tell if your oil is over the fill line
If you put too much oil in any car engine, the crankshaft will whip it into mayonnaise. The foamed up oil will have trouble passing through the oil pump and the the oil passages in the engine, potentially leading to under-lubrication of critical components. If you've over-filled your crankcase by more than a little, drain out the excess.
it will over heat, and crack. palm oil is much too flammable to be inserted into a car engine.
no its not good
crack the engine block and oil mixes with water or antifreeze.
You can try by seeing how much oil is in the car. If the oil stick reads that it has over filled with oil drain it out to a quart low and spin it over. It should start..
Work lots of over time to pay for a engine overhaul or junk the car and buy another car then check the oil once in a while.
1. Over filled oil. 2. Time for a ring or head job. 3.Time for a new engine.
Overfilling your car with engine oil is very unadvisable. If the oil is only slightly overfilled the engine will likely not have any problems, but overfilling by more than 1/2 quart or so (depending on the oil capacity of the engine) can result in several problems. The oil will be aerated by the excessive agitation caused by constant contact with the rotating components inside the engine, which can cause engine failures. Also, if drastically overfilled the oil will likely be sucked into the intake system possibly causing "hydrolocking" which will damage the engine. Hydrolocking is unlikely, and since it is relatively simple to remove oil from the engine there is no good reason to operate the engine while over-filled with oil.