Traces of Oil before + after turbo in pipes
Hi I have a modified sti type r ver 4.
I have a hesitation problem about 3500rpm espically on 1.5 boost.
When taking to my local turbo garage they located traces of oil in the pipes and have no idea where this is coming from
..
does anyone know what this could be and is it causing the hesitation.
Any help would really help and would be greatly appreciated.
I have a hesitation problem about 3500rpm espically on 1.5 boost.
When taking to my local turbo garage they located traces of oil in the pipes and have no idea where this is coming from
..does anyone know what this could be and is it causing the hesitation.
Any help would really help and would be greatly appreciated.
if the car has been overfilled with oil then that can cause it to get in the boost pipework/solenoid etc.
For your hesitation it could well be down to the sparks from the plugs being blown out by the boost levels you are running. Would check the ignition components to try to erradicate that.
For your hesitation it could well be down to the sparks from the plugs being blown out by the boost levels you are running. Would check the ignition components to try to erradicate that.
There will always be small traces of oil in a turbo cars pipe work. Its mostly made up of oil vapours that are being re-routed from the breather pipes, back into the induction system. These vaopurs are poisionous, so car manufacturers don't vent them to the atmosphere. Thats why people get oil catch tanks, to catch the excess vapours away from the induction.
Either the mechanic didn't know that, or there is more than what you would get through normal circulation.
Either the mechanic didn't know that, or there is more than what you would get through normal circulation.
There will always be small traces of oil in a turbo cars pipe work. Its mostly made up of oil vapours that are being re-routed from the breather pipes, back into the induction system. These vaopurs are poisionous, so car manufacturers don't vent them to the atmosphere. Thats why people get oil catch tanks, to catch the excess vapours away from the induction.
Either the mechanic didn't know that, or there is more than what you would get through normal circulation.
Either the mechanic didn't know that, or there is more than what you would get through normal circulation.
I was under the impression that it would be throughout the boost system. Where there is air, there will be vapours. I could be corrected, if this guy is a turbo mechanic, he should know his stuff.
If you are concerned about a big bill. Get it away from that garage, fit an oil catch tank (around 45 quid), clean the boost pipes, oil change if you like (to elimate possible overfilling) and run it about for a month or so. You should see the catch tank has a fair amount of residue in there, that would normally be collected in the pipes.
The hesitation could be comething else.
If you are concerned about a big bill. Get it away from that garage, fit an oil catch tank (around 45 quid), clean the boost pipes, oil change if you like (to elimate possible overfilling) and run it about for a month or so. You should see the catch tank has a fair amount of residue in there, that would normally be collected in the pipes.
The hesitation could be comething else.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Scott@ScoobySpares
Full Cars Breaking For Spares
61
Jan 11, 2021 03:08 PM
Scott@ScoobySpares
Full Cars Breaking For Spares
55
Aug 5, 2018 07:02 AM
Mattybr5@MB Developments
Full Cars Breaking For Spares
38
Jul 17, 2016 10:43 PM
Scott@ScoobySpares
Full Cars Breaking For Spares
7
Dec 14, 2015 08:16 AM
Mattybr5@MB Developments
Full Cars Breaking For Spares
20
Oct 22, 2015 06:12 AM



