The Stovebolt.com Forums Home | Tech Tips | Gallery | FAQ | Events | Features | Search
Fixing the old truck

BUSY BOLTERS
Are you one?

Where is it?? The Shop Area

continues to pull in the most views on the Stovebolt. In August alone there were over 22,000 views in those 13 forums.

Searching the Site - a click away
click here to search
New here ??? Where to start?
Click on image for the lowdown. Where do I go around here?
====
Who's Online Now
4 members (68ironhead, JW51, jmoore, 1 invisible), 567 guests, and 2 robots.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Forum Statistics
Forums66
Topics126,776
Posts1,039,271
Members48,100
Most Online2,175
Jul 21st, 2025
Step-by-step instructions for pictures in the forums
Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
#15726 07/07/2003 11:03 PM
Joined: Jan 2000
Posts: 1,586
T
Extreme Gabster
Extreme Gabster
T Offline
Joined: Jan 2000
Posts: 1,586
Suppose you have an engine that was just rebuilt 800 miles ago, overbore, new pistons, etc, done correct I'm told. When you first start it up, the exhaust is clear for a minute or two, then the blue smoke starts, pretty good cloud of blue.As the engine warms up the smoke disappears completely until the truck is shut down and sits long enough for the engine to cool down.The engine runs very well, has good compression, no unsual noises, normal oil pressure, no blowby.The exhaust pipes have a oily deposit on them so for sure it's oil smoke.I even saw the smoker in action for myself. All cylinders are smoking evenly, not just one or two. I'm thinking some sort of oil ring problem, like improper tension? It's a Chevy small block

#15727 07/08/2003 2:24 AM
Joined: Feb 2001
Posts: 1,096
D
'Bolter
'Bolter
D Offline
Joined: Feb 2001
Posts: 1,096
Poorly run in ? .. glazed bores ?? .. frown

#15728 07/08/2003 2:59 AM
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 71
4
Shop Shark
Shop Shark
4 Offline
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 71
I had a friend's motor doing the same thing. After checking it, I found the machine shop didn't use the umbrella style seals on the valve stems. They used the stock Chevy ones and the valve guides weren't as tight as they should be. Since it was in a T-bucket, and easy to pull the heads, we put the umbrella seals on and tried it. It stopped the constant smoking completely. You can change the seals without pulling the heads if that happens to be your problem. This doesn't cure loose guides however.

#15729 07/08/2003 5:58 AM
Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 46
F
Wrench Fetcher
Wrench Fetcher
F Offline
Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 46
Tony,
I saw a similar problem on my brother's freshly rebuilt **** V8. Every oil ring was installed incorrectly. Each of the center (corrigated looking) oil rings was overlapped rather than butted resulting in no pressure against the cylinder walls.
Frets


Moderated by  Phak1, Woogeroo 

Link Copied to Clipboard
Home | FAQ | Gallery | Tech Tips | Events | Features | Search | Hoo-Ya Shop
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 8.0.0
(Release build 20240826)
Responsive Width:

PHP: 8.3.11 Page Time: 0.833s Queries: 13 (0.058s) Memory: 0.6040 MB (Peak: 0.6446 MB) Data Comp: Zlib Server Time: 2025-09-22 14:26:01 UTC
Valid HTML 5 and Valid CSS