The engine oil light on the check panel is on, so I go and check the oil and....no oil on the stick at all, even when the car is cold. I put about a quart in and the light goes off. I check under the pan and can't find a crack, hole, nothing. A couple days later, the light comes on again, so I check the dipstick and no oil again. even in the snow, there is no sign of an oil leak underneath of the car. Anyone have a clue, or is a magician stealing my oil?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Engine Oil light on.
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Yakinho View PostNo, underside is not covered. How big of a tear-down do you think?sigpicFormer professional wrench thrower.
Current:
1988 325is S52
Former:
2008 Sparkling Graphite M3 Sedan(victim of home ownership)
1988 M5
1996 328is
Comment
-
Originally posted by Yakinho View PostThe engine oil light on the check panel is on, so I go and check the oil and....no oil on the stick at all, even when the car is cold. I put about a quart in and the light goes off. I check under the pan and can't find a crack, hole, nothing. A couple days later, the light comes on again, so I check the dipstick and no oil again. even in the snow, there is no sign of an oil leak underneath of the car. Anyone have a clue, or is a magician stealing my oil?
It got worse quickly. Finally found the leak by checking while the engine was running with me under it.
Was like $7.00 at the dealer, took like 2 minuites to change.
Otherwise, look for a guy in a tophat and cape.
Luke
Comment
-
Originally posted by StereoInstaller1 View PostHey man, I had damn near the same thing happen on mine Turned out to be a oil pressure sending unit was leaking only on the road, never when sitting.
It got worse quickly. Finally found the leak by checking while the engine was running with me under it.
Was like $7.00 at the dealer, took like 2 minuites to change.
Otherwise, look for a guy in a tophat and cape.
Luke
Blue smoke when gearing down = bad valve seals
Blue smoke when accelerating = bad piston rings
BTW.. you usually have to be more than a quart low for the oil level sender to trip the check panel light.
Comment
-
When you ask how big of a tear down it is - it depends. Do you want a short term fix or a long term fix? Best case scenario it's the head - so you have it rebuilt. Then the tight head will blow through your pistons more and the ring will go badly more quickly. If you determine it's the motor - completely rebuild it or get another one."We praise or find fault, depending on which of the two provides more opportunity for our powers of judgement to shine."
Comment
-
Thanks for the help guys, I'll check under the car as soon as the slush and snow melts away. If I can't see a leak then I will tear it all the way down and if the engine is going to shit, I guess I'll clean and sell the good bits and drive the minivan around untill I find a motor.Just going to drive it soft for now.
Comment
-
Originally posted by psloan View PostWhen you ask how big of a tear down it is - it depends. Do you want a short term fix or a long term fix? Best case scenario it's the head - so you have it rebuilt. Then the tight head will blow through your pistons more and the ring will go badly more quickly. If you determine it's the motor - completely rebuild it or get another one.
Some engines will take a new head without problems, others will blow the rings.
Kyle1988 M3, 97 840, 99 XJ
DILLIGAF
Comment
-
I'm with stereoinstall1 on this. Check for oil leaks under pressure.
I had a minor oil "consumption" issue at one time. I would go through more than a quart between changes, but only if I was running at high speed. I had a wet oil cooler hose, but the oil consumption didn't get any better when I changed it. If anything, the problem was getting worse.
About a year later I decided to change the oil cooler hose o-rings again. (They are odd-sized silver ones, Viton I think.) I pulled off the hose and looked for the o-ring... doh! It apparently had fallen off during installation. The metal-to-metal contact had prevented obvious leaking during idle, but when the oil thermostat opened (only while driving), the oil leaked directly onto the road.
Comment
Comment