Dallas_Lilly
Gold Member
Good Morning All, I am at a dead end with a problem and I thought maybe some one else could inject a fresh idea into my head.
Here is my problem. I have Montana 3040 with 800 hours on it. It has a Mitsubishi SL4 engine. At the RPM range from idle to 2K RPM everything runs and sounds fine. If you get it above 2K RPM it starts a blowing plume a light blue smoke. I know blue usually means oil being burnt but you can smell unburnt diesel and the oil level rises because of diesel dilution.
The first thing I did was started loosening injector lines at the injectors to determine if it was just one cylinder or multiple cylinders. I have determined that it is #3 cylinder. When you crack #3 the smoke dissapears, completely.
I didn't have an adapter for my compression tester however I was able to bring each cylinder to TDC and apply compressed air through the glow plug hole. There is not excessive leakage on any cylinder, infact it is might difficult to hold the wrench on the crankshaft bolt to keep the piston from moving down. I do not think I have bad valve seats or bad rings.
So I sent the injection pump and injectors to a injection shop and they rebuilt all injectors and the pump. That did not fix it, it still has the identical problem.
My next step tonight is to take a look at the valve springs on #3 and possibly switch them with the companion cylinder #1 and see if the problem moves to #1.
I am thinking it is a long shot but at this point I am out of ideas, anybody have more thoughts?
Oh and I have already adjusted the valves.
Thanks
Here is my problem. I have Montana 3040 with 800 hours on it. It has a Mitsubishi SL4 engine. At the RPM range from idle to 2K RPM everything runs and sounds fine. If you get it above 2K RPM it starts a blowing plume a light blue smoke. I know blue usually means oil being burnt but you can smell unburnt diesel and the oil level rises because of diesel dilution.
The first thing I did was started loosening injector lines at the injectors to determine if it was just one cylinder or multiple cylinders. I have determined that it is #3 cylinder. When you crack #3 the smoke dissapears, completely.
I didn't have an adapter for my compression tester however I was able to bring each cylinder to TDC and apply compressed air through the glow plug hole. There is not excessive leakage on any cylinder, infact it is might difficult to hold the wrench on the crankshaft bolt to keep the piston from moving down. I do not think I have bad valve seats or bad rings.
So I sent the injection pump and injectors to a injection shop and they rebuilt all injectors and the pump. That did not fix it, it still has the identical problem.
My next step tonight is to take a look at the valve springs on #3 and possibly switch them with the companion cylinder #1 and see if the problem moves to #1.
I am thinking it is a long shot but at this point I am out of ideas, anybody have more thoughts?
Oh and I have already adjusted the valves.
Thanks