Over fill with oil

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • PH4
    3rd Gear
    • Jan 2007
    • 375

    Over fill with oil

    What are the consequences of adding too much oil (overfilling) a 2.25 engine? What, if any, damage may result? Answers appreciated.
  • vansdonk
    Low Range
    • Oct 2008
    • 72

    #2
    Bad Oil

    I have always heard that over filling oil is almost if not worse than not having enough oil. Probably wrong on this. An old MG mech said that they put those lines on the dip stick for a reason. And they call it a dip stick for a reason....LOL I would try to stay as close to max as I could.
    Kristi
    1969 Series IIa 109
    1970 Series Wagon
    1974 1/2 MGB
    2004 Disco II-last of her kind

    Comment

    • PH4
      3rd Gear
      • Jan 2007
      • 375

      #3
      I have a brand new engine that my mechanic installed and may have overfilled with oil to the point it is spraying under acceleration from the oil filler breather cap. It has less than 400 miles on it and I want to know if it could have possibly harmed/damages something. I am not happy as it is a brand new engine.

      Comment

      • Donnie
        2nd Gear
        • Apr 2007
        • 287

        #4
        Originally posted by PH4
        I have a brand new engine that my mechanic installed and may have overfilled with oil to the point it is spraying under acceleration from the oil filler breather cap. It has less than 400 miles on it and I want to know if it could have possibly harmed/damages something. I am not happy as it is a brand new engine.
        it should leak out soon, no really a little over full will not cause problems unless it is high enough to get churned by the crankshaft, in which it will foam up, that it pick up air bubbles then your lube quality will diminish.... if U R of major concern, just drain some out >>>>>>>>>>>..
        I spent most of my money on women & cars, the rest of it I just wasted.......

        Comment

        • Jeff Aronson
          Moderator
          • Oct 2006
          • 569

          #5
          Oil Fill

          If you have a rebuilt engine, it will be quite tight and thus might force oil out at a greater amount. I'm still surprised that it's backing up through the oil breather, though; just how much above the dipstick is the oil level? Oil coming up that direction is usually problem with crankcase ventilation. Is there a PCV valve on the motor? Is it hooked up correctly?

          If it's more than 1 quart, I would just open the oil pan drain plug and drain out the correct amount. If it's not much above the dipstick level, I would have your mechanic check out the engine.

          Good luck,

          Jeff
          Jeff Aronson
          Vinalhaven, ME 04863
          '66 Series II-A SW 88"
          '66 Series II-A HT 88"
          '80 Triumph TR-7 Spider
          '80 Triumph Spitfire
          '66 Corvair Monza Coupe
          http://www.landroverwriter.com

          Comment

          • ArlowCT
            2nd Gear
            • Jul 2008
            • 238

            #6
            Is there a chance that the baffle between the block and fill tube was not installed? Not having this may lead to oil spraying out the filler tube. Hope it all turns out OK.

            Comment

            • PH4
              3rd Gear
              • Jan 2007
              • 375

              #7
              There is no PCV valve on the engine and the baffle was installed on the engine. I am a bit perplexed.

              Comment

              • Jeff Aronson
                Moderator
                • Oct 2006
                • 569

                #8
                Oil Fill

                How much extra oil is in the engine? Can you infer it by the dipstick markings? What happens when you have to correct amount of oil? Does it still push oil out the breather cap?

                Jeff
                Jeff Aronson
                Vinalhaven, ME 04863
                '66 Series II-A SW 88"
                '66 Series II-A HT 88"
                '80 Triumph TR-7 Spider
                '80 Triumph Spitfire
                '66 Corvair Monza Coupe
                http://www.landroverwriter.com

                Comment

                • PH4
                  3rd Gear
                  • Jan 2007
                  • 375

                  #9
                  Serious help needed/engine fire etc

                  We have checked and double checked the oil level. It appears to be occuring when truck is going above 30mph. Mainly occuring when traveling 55mph. Last Thursday on way to 45 minute trip oil caught on fire on the exhaust manifold. Fortunately, if you can use that term, it was small and able to be put out with a can of soda. The mechanic has checked and double checked the baffle and he says it can only go on the engine one way. It is shooting oil from vent cap on valve cover and vent cap on oil filler. I am extremely displeased as this is a brand new/rebuilt high performance engine. The seller of the engine(not RN as at the time they only had one engine complete with all ancillaries) has no idea why this is happening. Any help much appreciated. My mechanic also installed the exact same engine on my friends truck at the same time with no problems. Any and all help, is as always, greatly appreciated.

                  Comment

                  • 49coe
                    Low Range
                    • Aug 2008
                    • 32

                    #10
                    If you are blowing oil out both vents, my first thought would be an extreme case of blowby. A leakdown test may provide you with some answers, or at least rule some things out.

                    Comment

                    • PH4
                      3rd Gear
                      • Jan 2007
                      • 375

                      #11
                      What is blow by?

                      Comment

                      • SafeAirOne
                        Overdrive
                        • Apr 2008
                        • 3435

                        #12
                        Originally posted by PH4
                        What is blow by?
                        Blow-by occurs when combustion air from above the piston is not properly contained by the piston rings and "blows by" them into the crankshaft/sump area of the engine and then out any orifice leading to the sump area, such as the oil fill tube and breather.

                        Out of curiosity, are you sure the oil is coming from those areas? There's a member of this board who seemed to be having the same trouble (minus the fire), but the oil turned out to be coming from the distributor base/shaft orifice.
                        --Mark

                        1973 SIII 109 RHD 2.5NA Diesel

                        0-54mph in just under 11.5 minutes
                        (9.7 minutes now that she's a 3-door).

                        Comment

                        • PH4
                          3rd Gear
                          • Jan 2007
                          • 375

                          #13
                          I am pretty sure it is coming from both the oil filler tube and the vent cap on the valve cover. Would a compression check show anything? Either it was installed incorrectly or I was sent a bad engine. I need to figure out which one. If the baffle was installed correctly, what if anything could it be other than a bad engine?

                          Comment

                          • Jeff Aronson
                            Moderator
                            • Oct 2006
                            • 569

                            #14
                            A compression check might help answer some questions; basically, you want to see even compression at each cylinder - maybe around 120 - 130 lbs. If you had a bad cylinder, the compression would be either much higher at one or much lower.

                            IF the oil is coming out through the breather cap, then the problem has to be with crankcase pressure. Are you sure you don't have a crimped oil delivery line at the back of the head?

                            If the oil is being forced out only at higher rpm, that would further lead to the question of what pressure is buillding up and why. Have you ckecked the oil pressure valve at the oil filter? Have you checked the oil pump inside the oil pan? If the release valve inside the pump is not working, then you could build up too high a pressure.

                            Also, your installer should hook up an oil pressure meter to determine the oil pressure at the filter. It should be no more than 40 psi at warm startup, 60 psi at highway speed when cold, reducing to 40. At hot idle, 20 psi is common. If your pressure is much higher, then you've helped narrow down the likely causes.

                            When the mechanic removes the oil pan to look at the pump, he should check the bearings, too. It's rare that engines are so tight that oil gets overly pressurized as you're implying.

                            Good luck,

                            Jeff
                            Jeff Aronson
                            Vinalhaven, ME 04863
                            '66 Series II-A SW 88"
                            '66 Series II-A HT 88"
                            '80 Triumph TR-7 Spider
                            '80 Triumph Spitfire
                            '66 Corvair Monza Coupe
                            http://www.landroverwriter.com

                            Comment

                            • 49coe
                              Low Range
                              • Aug 2008
                              • 32

                              #15
                              A compression check will only tell you if there is something amiss with a cylinder, not what the problem is. A leakdown test works by putting the piston at TDC and then blowing compressed air into the cylinder through an adaptor that goes in the sparkplug hole. It has a guage that will tell you how fast the air is leaking out of the cylinder, i.e. alot of leakage = problem, not much = fine. The test has an added benifit of showing where the leak is occuring by listening where the air is escaping. Sound of air leaking in oil breathers = rings, cracked piston, or blown headgasket to an oil galley; Carb = intake valves, exaust= exaust valves, radiator= blown headgasket to waterjacket, etc. Good luck.

                              Comment

                              Working...