News1 min ago
Contaminated Oil
9 Answers
Child one recently passed his test and is currenly on the hunt for a cheap, small car.
We had a look at a Corsa 1.0 on a 52 plate today, had a drive and all seemed fine until I removed the oil filler cap. There was a small dirty white/yellow deposit on the underside of the cap so I thought water contamination in the oil.
My question (at last) is, is a deposit of this kind always a sure sign of impending doom or can it be just one of those things that happens to older cars?
We had a look at a Corsa 1.0 on a 52 plate today, had a drive and all seemed fine until I removed the oil filler cap. There was a small dirty white/yellow deposit on the underside of the cap so I thought water contamination in the oil.
My question (at last) is, is a deposit of this kind always a sure sign of impending doom or can it be just one of those things that happens to older cars?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The way the weather has been a few cars will be showing the same Doug, when the car is running does it give out a lot of white smoke? " Condensation" & how long does this last & take the cold weather into consideration, what's the mileage? Check the Coolant tank for sludge. On the market at this time there is a product called "Steel Seal" Is is very well recommended to do the head job without the removal of the head & can save you a lot of money.
This is called 'mayonaise' by those in the trade. It is a cold weather problem and condensation causes it. The car is probably used for short runs as a motorway thrash would eliminate it.
I would judge the sale by other criteria . Is it an overhead camshaft? These have been known to break if teh oil feeds are blocked - beware
I would judge the sale by other criteria . Is it an overhead camshaft? These have been known to break if teh oil feeds are blocked - beware