burning oil 1991 Accord EX
I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched
to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any thoughts? |
Re: burning oil 1991 Accord EX
at this rate, it could be a leak somewhere near valve cover area. An oil
seal must be leaking into the cylinders, thus your engine is slowly burning oil - but not leaking oil per se (thus you cannot find any oil on garage floor). It could also be a worn out gasket. When you run the engine, do you see a slightly blue-ish exhaust (not a clear one)? This kind of problem is not costly to repair in terms of parts (oil seals are not expensive at all, valve gasket could cost you a fair amount), however it's a pain in the ass to get to - and defintely not a good idea to do it yourself unless you have experience. However don't take it to a dealer/garage yet - I could be totally off. Wait for some of the more knowledgeable ppl in the forum to reply. Cheers, Yuri "Robert Blank" <bob@NOblankproductions.com> wrote in message news:1g7uttp.1d9c8xzlpdtfyN%bob@NOblankproductions .com... > I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched > to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. > > No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any > thoughts? |
Re: burning oil 1991 Accord EX
at this rate, it could be a leak somewhere near valve cover area. An oil
seal must be leaking into the cylinders, thus your engine is slowly burning oil - but not leaking oil per se (thus you cannot find any oil on garage floor). It could also be a worn out gasket. When you run the engine, do you see a slightly blue-ish exhaust (not a clear one)? This kind of problem is not costly to repair in terms of parts (oil seals are not expensive at all, valve gasket could cost you a fair amount), however it's a pain in the ass to get to - and defintely not a good idea to do it yourself unless you have experience. However don't take it to a dealer/garage yet - I could be totally off. Wait for some of the more knowledgeable ppl in the forum to reply. Cheers, Yuri "Robert Blank" <bob@NOblankproductions.com> wrote in message news:1g7uttp.1d9c8xzlpdtfyN%bob@NOblankproductions .com... > I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched > to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. > > No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any > thoughts? |
Re: burning oil 1991 Accord EX
at this rate, it could be a leak somewhere near valve cover area. An oil
seal must be leaking into the cylinders, thus your engine is slowly burning oil - but not leaking oil per se (thus you cannot find any oil on garage floor). It could also be a worn out gasket. When you run the engine, do you see a slightly blue-ish exhaust (not a clear one)? This kind of problem is not costly to repair in terms of parts (oil seals are not expensive at all, valve gasket could cost you a fair amount), however it's a pain in the ass to get to - and defintely not a good idea to do it yourself unless you have experience. However don't take it to a dealer/garage yet - I could be totally off. Wait for some of the more knowledgeable ppl in the forum to reply. Cheers, Yuri "Robert Blank" <bob@NOblankproductions.com> wrote in message news:1g7uttp.1d9c8xzlpdtfyN%bob@NOblankproductions .com... > I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched > to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. > > No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any > thoughts? |
Re: burning oil 1991 Accord EX
at this rate, it could be a leak somewhere near valve cover area. An oil
seal must be leaking into the cylinders, thus your engine is slowly burning oil - but not leaking oil per se (thus you cannot find any oil on garage floor). It could also be a worn out gasket. When you run the engine, do you see a slightly blue-ish exhaust (not a clear one)? This kind of problem is not costly to repair in terms of parts (oil seals are not expensive at all, valve gasket could cost you a fair amount), however it's a pain in the ass to get to - and defintely not a good idea to do it yourself unless you have experience. However don't take it to a dealer/garage yet - I could be totally off. Wait for some of the more knowledgeable ppl in the forum to reply. Cheers, Yuri "Robert Blank" <bob@NOblankproductions.com> wrote in message news:1g7uttp.1d9c8xzlpdtfyN%bob@NOblankproductions .com... > I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched > to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. > > No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any > thoughts? |
Re: burning oil 1991 Accord EX
Robert Blank wrote:
> > I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched > to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. > > No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any > thoughts? ============ Replace the PCV per the Owner's manual. It can suck a LOT of oil out of your engine if it sticks open, and that can damage your catalytic converter. 'Curly' =============== |
Re: burning oil 1991 Accord EX
Robert Blank wrote:
> > I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched > to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. > > No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any > thoughts? ============ Replace the PCV per the Owner's manual. It can suck a LOT of oil out of your engine if it sticks open, and that can damage your catalytic converter. 'Curly' =============== |
Re: burning oil 1991 Accord EX
Robert Blank wrote:
> > I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched > to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. > > No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any > thoughts? ============ Replace the PCV per the Owner's manual. It can suck a LOT of oil out of your engine if it sticks open, and that can damage your catalytic converter. 'Curly' =============== |
Re: burning oil 1991 Accord EX
Robert Blank wrote:
> > I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched > to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. > > No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any > thoughts? ============ Replace the PCV per the Owner's manual. It can suck a LOT of oil out of your engine if it sticks open, and that can damage your catalytic converter. 'Curly' =============== |
Re: burning oil 1991 Accord EX
Which engine is that specifically?
"'Curly Q. Links'" <motsco__@interbaun.com> wrote in message news:400D73B8.3A92B99C@interbaun.com... > Robert Blank wrote: > > > > I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched > > to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. > > > > No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any > > thoughts? > > ============ > > Replace the PCV per the Owner's manual. It can suck a LOT of oil out of > your engine if it sticks open, and that can damage your catalytic > converter. > > 'Curly' > > =============== |
Re: burning oil 1991 Accord EX
Which engine is that specifically?
"'Curly Q. Links'" <motsco__@interbaun.com> wrote in message news:400D73B8.3A92B99C@interbaun.com... > Robert Blank wrote: > > > > I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched > > to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. > > > > No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any > > thoughts? > > ============ > > Replace the PCV per the Owner's manual. It can suck a LOT of oil out of > your engine if it sticks open, and that can damage your catalytic > converter. > > 'Curly' > > =============== |
Re: burning oil 1991 Accord EX
Which engine is that specifically?
"'Curly Q. Links'" <motsco__@interbaun.com> wrote in message news:400D73B8.3A92B99C@interbaun.com... > Robert Blank wrote: > > > > I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched > > to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. > > > > No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any > > thoughts? > > ============ > > Replace the PCV per the Owner's manual. It can suck a LOT of oil out of > your engine if it sticks open, and that can damage your catalytic > converter. > > 'Curly' > > =============== |
Re: burning oil 1991 Accord EX
Which engine is that specifically?
"'Curly Q. Links'" <motsco__@interbaun.com> wrote in message news:400D73B8.3A92B99C@interbaun.com... > Robert Blank wrote: > > > > I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched > > to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. > > > > No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any > > thoughts? > > ============ > > Replace the PCV per the Owner's manual. It can suck a LOT of oil out of > your engine if it sticks open, and that can damage your catalytic > converter. > > 'Curly' > > =============== |
Re: burning oil 1991 Accord EX
On Tue, 20 Jan 2004 14:47:27 GMT, bob@NOblankproductions.com (Robert
Blank) wrote: >I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched >to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. > >No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any >thoughts? You are almost certainly burning it. Someone mentioned PCV valve - definitely worth a try. But based on the age of the car I am thinking that the engine is ready for an overhaul. Can you tell us current miles and how it was maintained and driven? Engines burning oil don't always smoke like they used to. The catalytic convertor removes a lot of it - at least until it is wrecked. Here is an easy test. Warm the car up then have a friend follow you. After you get it up to about 40 (in fourth gear if it is a manual), take your foot off the gas and let it coast down to about 30. Then floor it back up to 40. If your friend sees a cloud of blue smoke when you punch it, the rings are worn. |
Re: burning oil 1991 Accord EX
On Tue, 20 Jan 2004 14:47:27 GMT, bob@NOblankproductions.com (Robert
Blank) wrote: >I seem to lose about a quart every 500 miles in my Accord. I switched >to 15w/40 but it does not seem to help. > >No oil on the garage floor - and no oil coming from the tailpipe. Any >thoughts? You are almost certainly burning it. Someone mentioned PCV valve - definitely worth a try. But based on the age of the car I am thinking that the engine is ready for an overhaul. Can you tell us current miles and how it was maintained and driven? Engines burning oil don't always smoke like they used to. The catalytic convertor removes a lot of it - at least until it is wrecked. Here is an easy test. Warm the car up then have a friend follow you. After you get it up to about 40 (in fourth gear if it is a manual), take your foot off the gas and let it coast down to about 30. Then floor it back up to 40. If your friend sees a cloud of blue smoke when you punch it, the rings are worn. |
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