jspringator
10-09-2004, 08:18
While driving through the Virginia mountains at the West Virginia line, towing my trailer, the cabin filled with smoke. I thought the engine was on fire. Pulled over immediately. When I shut off the engine I noticed oil pressure at 20 lbs. After being towed to a garage in Sulfur Springs, West Virginia, the mechanic discovered that one of my aftermarket "Greg" oil lines was installed too close to the exhaust manifold, which burned a hole in it, causing oil to shoot, under pressure, on the exhaust manifold. The problem was in the installation of the line, not the lines themselves. This happened around 3:30 p.m. By the time we got towed (including trailer) to the shop it was after 5:00 p.m. The mechanic diagnosed the problem, and after much difficulty, removed the hose from the block side (without removing anything else), and the middle connection behind the grill. He cursed extensively and had burns on his arms. Believe it or not, he had a new hose section made up at a shop at 8:00 p.m. on Friday night. We were completed by 9:00 p.m., and were on the road about 10:00 p.m. The entire experience (so far) cost $350, including tow, parts and labor. I am trying to decide how much of an ahole to be to my 6.5 specialist diesel mechanic, who installed the lines and should have known better. The turbo already had about 75,000 miles on it, but appeared to boost well on the way home.
I guess, overall, provided nothing bad shows up later, I was pretty lucky. What makes me mad is this DID NOT HAVE TO HAPPEN! This guy knew reliability was my main concern, and I would have paid whatever price it took to have the lines installed properly. The only thing I can figure is the line might have been a little short. The new one was made a foot longer.
If you didn't install your aftermarket oil lines yourself, check their proximity to the exhaust manifold.
I guess, overall, provided nothing bad shows up later, I was pretty lucky. What makes me mad is this DID NOT HAVE TO HAPPEN! This guy knew reliability was my main concern, and I would have paid whatever price it took to have the lines installed properly. The only thing I can figure is the line might have been a little short. The new one was made a foot longer.
If you didn't install your aftermarket oil lines yourself, check their proximity to the exhaust manifold.