Juddering and white smoke
Juddering and white smoke
Author
Discussion

Markb03

Original Poster:

34 posts

170 months

Sunday 21st July 2013
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Hi all,

My car seems to be a little sick but I am not to sure what it is?


On a cold start it judders. I have got out and looked and the exhaust is moving and white smoke is coming out. A rev normally fixes this. After about 30 seconds the juddering stops and no more white smoke and it drives fine.

Now I have checked under the oil cap and there is no white sludge, water tank water is still pink and filled up so its not losing any and although there was 2 tiny bubbles in there none appeared while revving it and it has not lost any power. Its not over heater either. So I am ruling the head gasket out for now.

But I am stumped. I have a few idea on what it may be but please tell me if I am wrong.

Fuse plugs?
Bad fuel?
MAF sensor
Starter motor
Battery
Timing belt out (Had it changed a year ago)
Head gasket (Although I dont think its this)
Injectors
Sticky valves

I am stumped at what else it could be?

elliotff

174 posts

163 months

Monday 22nd July 2013
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What car is it ?

Markb03

Original Poster:

34 posts

170 months

Monday 22nd July 2013
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Fiesta Zetec-s 2001

pmjg66

2,756 posts

237 months

Monday 22nd July 2013
quotequote all
Think coolant is finding its way in when left after a run.

Keep a check on the coolant level for a while,note the bottles can have a stain mark inside from previous levels wink

LuS1fer

43,281 posts

268 months

Tuesday 23rd July 2013
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Is it smoke or just condensation. All cars will have some water left in the exhaust which will come out as steam effectively.

Have you checked your oil level as Ford dipsticks are utter sh*te and you need to measure in the correct amount. They are easy to overfill.

Markb03

Original Poster:

34 posts

170 months

Wednesday 24th July 2013
quotequote all
Coolant level has hardly dropped if any. And oil is fine. I think its condensation as there is water in the tip.

I do have a video of it happening.

http://s191.photobucket.com/user/Mastspotter/media...

dilateous

56 posts

172 months

Tuesday 30th July 2013
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Well, looks like you've got a modified exhaust without a downward pointing end on the tailpipe. I think it is the case that a downward pointing end on the tailpipe, or even a downward sloping tailpipe, is to dissuade water, rain water, moisture etc from entering the exhaust system.

Markb03

Original Poster:

34 posts

170 months

dilateous

56 posts

172 months

Wednesday 7th August 2013
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Looks like steam. I know water (vapour) is a product of combustion, but that looks a bit too much.

Are there any other symptoms? I thought the possibility of head gasket, but doubtless there would be other symptoms.

On another tack, I'm sure your modified exhaust system is well designed, but I'm always suspicious about modified anything that's not made by the original manufacturer. Undoubtedly it's a VERY outside possibility - and if everything else checks out okay - that maybe there's some sort of cavity or void within the modified exhaust system whereby the temperature is such that water vapour (normal product of combustion) collects and condenses and then comes out as steam at a later time.

Markb03

Original Poster:

34 posts

170 months

Friday 16th August 2013
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Hi again

Bit of an update. I bought a OBD reader and it came up with this

P0303 - Ford Type Powertrain - Ignition System or Misfire -

ISO/SAE Controlled Description Cylinder Number 3 Misfire Conditions Cause Engine running in a positive torque condition, then the PCM detected a misfire condition in engine cylinder number 3 (lack of spark or fuel metering, base engine)

And again this later

Pending Fault Log ------------------ P0300: Random/Multiple Cylinder Misfire Detected

As before the car sorts itself out with 30 seconds and after clearing the fault and trying again the above fault goes.


dilateous

56 posts

172 months

Monday 19th August 2013
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As far as I could tell it was only in the first video could I detect a misfire - and that appeared to be only for a few seconds after starting. Although having said that if this occasions unburned fuel entering the exhaust system, then the catalytic converter once warmed up will convert such to CO2 and H2O (water).

So once the cat had warmed any unburned fuel may well produce steam (water vapour).

If that's the case it may account for the symptoms, i.e. initial misfire (neat fuel into the exhaust) followed by steam from the exhaust once the cat was up to temp.

Therefore what's wrong with the engine? After eliminating ignition and the like I suppose I'd perform a compression test. If it's a well used engine, pitted valves might be one possibility.