jonahmulski
Newbie
Having blown two head gaskets on my Toyota trucks as a teenager I’m extra paranoid about overheating and blowing head gaskets. So when the four cylinder Ford Lehman in our sailboat overheated a while back I became worried that the head gasket might have been compromised. It happened when the end cap on the heat exchanger blew out. How this went unnoticed as long as it did is a long story. The short version is that it was one of those “one thing leads to another” scenarios that happens in the middle of the night while motoring around a notorious point (Point Conception, CA). It’s been over a year now so I don’t remember exactly how hot the motor got. I don’t think the temperature gauge needle was pinned but if my memory serves me right it was getting there. We shut her down and sailed a zig-zag track for ten hours to get twenty miles north to Morro Bay. We were able to repair the heat exchanger at a local radiator shop and the motor operated normal for the rest of the trip north to Moss Landing. Over the last year there have been a number of things that have kept the head gasket worry with me.
The exhaust has been getting whiter and whiter. The coolant has been leaking out the over flow more and more. There is dark fluid mixed with the coolant. It’s a little oily too. However, the engine oil does not have any water in it and she runs like a champ.
The guy who owned Orion before us did not use her much, she was a live-a-board. He did start her up once a month and run her till she was warm and did basic maintenance but nothing more. Now she has been running her for hours on end when the wind is light and we want to get north or south to our next destination (because this is a trawler forum I can say this without too much embarrassment). So these things could be the product of routine maintenance that needs to be done. White smoke – the valves need to be adjusted. Coolant leaking and having dark oily fluid in it – coolant needs to be changed and/or the exhaust elbow gasket is leaking (American Diesel’s suggestion) or the exhaust manifold is having issues.
Until now all my wrenching experience has been with gas motors. This is the first diesel I have owned and what amazing engines they are! These things should be everywhere! Back to me though… They are a combustion engine so I know the basics but I don’t know a lot of their specifics. How hard is it to blow a head gasket? Are compression tests normal for diesel engines? Any other thoughts on what could lead to the coolant leaking and having dark oily fluid in it?
I did adjust the valves. They were three or four thousandths loose. Is that a lot? But I haven’t yet warmed her up to see if the white smoke is still happening. It got too late. I’ll do that in the morning and post what I find. In the meantime any input would be much appreciated.
Oh, the motor has 1400 hours on it, 200 of which we put on in the last year and a half. Any other background needed?
The exhaust has been getting whiter and whiter. The coolant has been leaking out the over flow more and more. There is dark fluid mixed with the coolant. It’s a little oily too. However, the engine oil does not have any water in it and she runs like a champ.
The guy who owned Orion before us did not use her much, she was a live-a-board. He did start her up once a month and run her till she was warm and did basic maintenance but nothing more. Now she has been running her for hours on end when the wind is light and we want to get north or south to our next destination (because this is a trawler forum I can say this without too much embarrassment). So these things could be the product of routine maintenance that needs to be done. White smoke – the valves need to be adjusted. Coolant leaking and having dark oily fluid in it – coolant needs to be changed and/or the exhaust elbow gasket is leaking (American Diesel’s suggestion) or the exhaust manifold is having issues.
Until now all my wrenching experience has been with gas motors. This is the first diesel I have owned and what amazing engines they are! These things should be everywhere! Back to me though… They are a combustion engine so I know the basics but I don’t know a lot of their specifics. How hard is it to blow a head gasket? Are compression tests normal for diesel engines? Any other thoughts on what could lead to the coolant leaking and having dark oily fluid in it?
I did adjust the valves. They were three or four thousandths loose. Is that a lot? But I haven’t yet warmed her up to see if the white smoke is still happening. It got too late. I’ll do that in the morning and post what I find. In the meantime any input would be much appreciated.
Oh, the motor has 1400 hours on it, 200 of which we put on in the last year and a half. Any other background needed?