your truck blue smoke when it burns oil, or transmission fluid.
Because is they did they would set of smoke alarms and water wud b spraying everywhere
The color of the smoke will help identify the problem. Blue smoke is engine or transmission oil. Black smoke, excess fuel. White smoke, engine coolant.
If it is white smoke you are burning antifreeze. blue smoke is oil. black smoke is fuel. if it smokes after it is warmed to operating temp. you need to have a mechanic look at it before you have to walk. Smoke right after starting (blue) is usually a sign of valve guide seals going bad.
Excess fuel causes black smoke.
Engine coolant leaking into cylinder. Possible bad head gasket.
burning oil = blue smoke
buy a cummins
is this a diesel truck?does this engine have a turbo?if it is a diesel with a turbo,it will blow white smoke when cold till it warms upif it continues to blow smoke check your air filterother reason if it continues to blow smoke is the turbo is about to crater get it checkedalso check engine oil for coolant lossif coolant is leaking into cylanders,this will cause white smoke
It can.
A for sale sign, then buy a diesel.
There's a good chance that coolant is getting mixed in with your oil.
vtecs do blow blue smoke when the valve stem seals are worn and the piston rings are worn alsoits verycommon in dohc vtec engines
blow by through the turbo ,my truck did the same thing had to get the turbo rebuilt
valve guides and oil rings are most likely worn but a pcv valve can be stuck and blow blue smoke
Too much pot down the intake.
White smoke is usually a sign of water in combustion chamber-check oil for any signs of water in oil
White smoke = Coolant leak, head gasket is the likely culprit. Blue smoke = Engine burning oil. Black smoke = Engine running too rich, wasting fuel.