It won’t let me upload a video, but this an 305 v8. I haven’t cleaned the engine bay throughly yet, but there is smoke coming from the egr valve, when the truck warms up. It doesn’t smoke till about 10-15 minutes. I’m
Agree. And the exhaust manifold smokes because oil leaking from rocker covers? Just a guess.
It was a common problem on 80s GMs when they went to rtv sealed joints that didn't seal well when aged.
And surprisingly on the 2005 Lexus 330 (aka Camry) I bought for my grandson where the cam cover gaskets are not heat resistant and get hard in their old age and leak.
That’s the manifold heat shield for a carb setup. There is a piece of tubing that goes from that piece to the bottom of the intake snout. It feeds warm air to the carb when it’s cold and a vac door closes it off once it reaches temp.
As mentioned, smoke is from oil on the exhaust manifold.
That’s the manifold heat shield for a carb setup. There is a piece of tubing that goes from that piece to the bottom of the intake snout. It feeds warm air to the carb when it’s cold and a vac door closes it off once it reaches temp.
As mentioned, smoke is from oil on the exhaust manifold.
Those old heat stoves were a good idea for cold climes. I think on Chevys they were branded something like AC AutoThermac.
My older Japanese cars had a manual equivalent - there was a wing nut on the air-cleaner housing, and instructions to slide a moveable panel on the housing to one position or the other depending on ambient temperature (61°F IIRC).
The idea was to duct preheated air to the carburetor in cooler weather.
I think these gadgets, and heat-riser valves, disappeared with the introduction of FI.