blue smoke from a Perkins 4-108
Me wrote in news:Me-6D444D.14425410052006
@netnews.worldnet.att.net:
3200 hours TT (total time) on a 4-108, hardly even Broke IN. You may
just have a weepy Injector, or a guide that didn't seat. Compression
test should rule out any ring, or topend problems. A little blue smoke
is normal untill the engine comes up to Thermistat Temp, and one
shouldn't place much stock in what happens to exhaust color unless the
engine is loaded.
Me
I agree. Both the old 4-108 with 9000+ hours on it and the "newsed" 4-
108 with 900 hours on it blue smoke when cold. Cold cylinder walls cause
the fuel spray to recondense on them and it burns slowly off like
lubeoil. Nothing is wrong with this tractor engine...(c;
My captain had a dripless bearing installed with a water injection line
that filled the exhaust stack with seawater, along with 3 of the 4
cylinders, hydrolocking the motor. His attempts to restart it this way
didn't even phase the engine, although I thought the battery cable was
going to jump out of the boat from the current!
The engine was pickled at the dock and one injector needed replacement,
but after a "few oil changes" she's rarin' ta go!
The Perkins is a fantastic engine that will take awful abuse like this.
A little blue smoke from a cold Perkins with no preheater running is just
normal. Wide open throttle trying to avoid hitting the dock is also
exciting. It sounds like she's gonna blow from the knocking and the
black smoke pouring up from under the stern will keep the mosquitoes at
bay, even in Florida!...(c;
I doubt any Yanmar will survive "Perkins abuse".
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