Changed the oil yesterday and it was looking like chocolate milk. Damn. I had once before noticed coolant pooling on top the upper intake (in the little grooves that run along where the bolts are. Is there any way without pulling the intake to know which gasket is going to need replacing, upper vs lower.
I guess my two questions are:
1.Could blowing the LOWER intake gasket put coolant on top of the intake manifold as i described above....
and
2.Could blowing the UPPER intake put coolant in my engine? I assume it could.
On a side note, I did drive the car a little bit just before I changed the oil. It runs just fine (aside from a little bit of noise that comes from the motor which I believe is the timing chain getting a little loose). The oil pressure was normal (spun bearings should show up as low oil pressure i think), temperature is fine... hopefully the few times I drove it with collant contaminated oil didnt do any permanent damage. Time will tell.
Also, i suppose it could be head gaskets, but I wouldn't think that would put coolant on top of the intake either.
I guess my two questions are:
1.Could blowing the LOWER intake gasket put coolant on top of the intake manifold as i described above....
and
2.Could blowing the UPPER intake put coolant in my engine? I assume it could.
On a side note, I did drive the car a little bit just before I changed the oil. It runs just fine (aside from a little bit of noise that comes from the motor which I believe is the timing chain getting a little loose). The oil pressure was normal (spun bearings should show up as low oil pressure i think), temperature is fine... hopefully the few times I drove it with collant contaminated oil didnt do any permanent damage. Time will tell.
Also, i suppose it could be head gaskets, but I wouldn't think that would put coolant on top of the intake either.
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