cylinder rings are worn out, cracked or broken
2006-06-08 07:59:57
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answer #1
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answered by Pobept 6
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If the car is fuel injected you probably have a faulty fuel pressure regulator located on the fuel rail. if it is carburated it may be the floats are stuck or some debris has gotten in it and is over filling the carburator, most carburated engines also have a mechanical fuel pump located on the engine if the diaphram ruptures it can also put gas in the oil. in any case don't drive it untill it is fixed or you will destroy the engine.
2006-06-08 09:52:19
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answer #2
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answered by garidor 3
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"engine was dumping gas into the engine and the problem was a bad fuel pump"
"gasoline in the oil during an oil change?
A friend believes that it could be an injector(s) leaking after shutdown."
"The only place it could get that much fuel from and run is the fuel pump."
"theres only 2 places the engine can get gas the mechanical fuel pump (if the engine has one) or the carb. (fuel injection) I would guss the cost of parts for the elec fuel pump swap should be under $80 (cheap pump)"
2006-06-08 08:00:10
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answer #3
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answered by OneRunningMan 6
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All of those answers could be true but it could be an easier problem that I would check out first. You could have a bad coil pack one or more spark plugs could not be firing. Or you could have bad plug wires. Any time a plug doesnt spark the fuel (instead of being burned) just gets dumped into the crankcase. So I would have your spark plugs coil pack and wires chevked out first and make sure you dont have a misfire on one or more plugs. If that shows nothing then try the other options as answered.
2006-06-08 12:54:18
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answer #4
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answered by rwings8215 5
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You float is sticking open letting the gas to go into the cylinders
OR
If you have a mechanical fuel pump than your diaphram is bad
2006-06-08 08:27:11
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answer #5
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answered by Vulcan 1 5
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Your fuel line and/or oil line may be cracked. I suggest taking it to the closes garage and have a mechanic look at your problem. It may be the smartest thing you could do. DONT DRIVE THE VEHICLE.
2006-06-08 08:00:31
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answer #6
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answered by redneckwomankm3 1
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Probably bad rings and spark plugs not firing properly, so unburnt fuel is seeping into your oil through the rings on your pistons, in the cylinder.
2006-06-08 08:01:21
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answer #7
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answered by AXEMANSIXSTRING 3
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