Author Topic: New to the forum, but not to VW diesels. Having an oil prob  (Read 6465 times)

October 05, 2008, 12:46:07 am

Supersport654

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New to the forum, but not to VW diesels. Having an oil prob
« on: October 05, 2008, 12:46:07 am »
Hey guys!  My name is Aaron, and I live in Washington State.  I used to drive a really nice '81 Jetta diesel.  I got bored with it and my buddy made me an offer I couldn't refuse, so off it went.  I then "upgraded" to a '91 Jetta diesel.  It was a REAL project.  Nice car now, but it is giving me a strange problem...

About 1000 miles after changing the oil, I get the dreaded "low oil pressure" warning.  The high side (2k RPM) one.  Never at idle.  But it does not seem to be the common problem with the actual warning system itself.  Some doofus had put a gasser oil pressure sensor in the oil filter housing, but I changed that one out for the correct diesel sensor.  I even changed out the main and rod bearings.  My pressure IS actually LOW because my nice, thick Delo 400 is now the consistency of WD-40 when it is hot!  And there is MORE OF IT THAN THERE SHOULD BE! :roll:

Clearly, I am getting about a quart of diesel into my oil every 1000 miles.  The question I have for you guys is, "Where is it coming from?"  At first I thought that I had an injector that was leaking down when the car was shut off, and that was what was dumping oil into my crankcase (down past the piston rings).  So I sprung for a set of new injectors...same problem.  I thought that maybe it was leaking from the LDA aneroid, going through the vacuum line, into the vacuum pump, and from there into the crankcase.  The aneroid does leak a little, but that does not seem to be the problem.  The pump is set just where it is supposed to be for a '91...at .90 mm.  Pump seems strong.  Car smokes a bit, but not much.  Any thoughts?  Thanks!  -Aaron

Reply #1October 05, 2008, 06:27:07 am

jimfoo

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New to the forum, but not to VW diesels. Having an oil prob
« Reply #1 on: October 05, 2008, 06:27:07 am »
The LDA shouldn't hook to the vacuum pump.
Jim
1966 Land-Rover 88" with 1.9 1Z which has been transformed to an M-TDI
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Driven daily

Reply #2October 05, 2008, 07:04:48 am

burn_your_money

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« Reply #2 on: October 05, 2008, 07:04:48 am »
Can you take a picture of your engine bay? Where did you get your injectors?
Tyler

Reply #3October 05, 2008, 02:02:20 pm

jtanguay

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« Reply #3 on: October 05, 2008, 02:02:20 pm »
i had a similar problem...  my oil level was rising and it didn't quite look like coolant, but i replaced the oil cooler anyway and the problem went away.  i too thought that diesel was leaking from an injector after shut down because the oil level was rising...  and when i drained the oil it was very difficult to tell if coolant was mixing with the oil.  maybe if i drained it into a big pickle jar or something i would have been able to clearly tell.

i dont know if its because some guys like to really reef on the oil filter or what, but the oil coolers do go.  VW recommends replacing them after any major engine work.  not sure if bearings count, but worth checking out in your case  :wink:

if i were you i would drain the oil into a glass jar and see if the oil separates.  because like the others above, i dont see how diesel fuel can get into the oil other than leaking injectors, and that is assuming your injectors are not faulty.


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Reply #4October 06, 2008, 04:49:24 pm

Supersport654

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« Reply #4 on: October 06, 2008, 04:49:24 pm »
Quote from: "jimfoo"
The LDA shouldn't hook to the vacuum pump.


The LDA is vacuum operated, right?  The sticker on my core support shows the LDA connected to the vacuum pump.  ---A

Reply #5October 06, 2008, 04:55:18 pm

VW_Commuter

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« Reply #5 on: October 06, 2008, 04:55:18 pm »
Quote from: "Supersport654"
Quote from: "jimfoo"
The LDA shouldn't hook to the vacuum pump.


The LDA is vacuum operated, right?  The sticker on my core support shows the LDA connected to the vacuum pump.  ---A


The LDA is pressure operated, not vacuum operated.  Think of the LDA as a mechanism that reduces the amount of fuel delivered when there is no boost.  As boost builds, fuel in increased up to the max allowed by the max fuel screw.  The LDA should be connected to the intake manifold and not the vacuum pump.  With the way you have it connected it might be possible to suck fuel out of the IP and into the engine due to bad seals on the LDA and the vacuum pump.
Greg

'06 Golf TDI traded in for a '12 Jeep Rubicon (the Phatbox is available)
'91 Jetta TD, a work in progress (I'll do a build thread when I start in earnest)
'65 Notchback, a project not yet started

Reply #6October 06, 2008, 04:59:35 pm

Supersport654

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« Reply #6 on: October 06, 2008, 04:59:35 pm »
Quote from: "burn_your_money"
Can you take a picture of your engine bay? Where did you get your injectors?


The injectors are Bosch rebuilds, and were purchased through WorldPak.  It did the same thing with the old injectors that it did with the new ones...that is why I replaced them. :cry:   --A

http://i9.photobucket.com/albums/a59/cobrajet25/jettabay001.jpg

http://i9.photobucket.com/albums/a59/cobrajet25/jettabay002.jpg

Reply #7October 06, 2008, 05:05:33 pm

Supersport654

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« Reply #7 on: October 06, 2008, 05:05:33 pm »
Quote from: "VW_Commuter"
Quote from: "Supersport654"
Quote from: "jimfoo"
The LDA shouldn't hook to the vacuum pump.


The LDA is vacuum operated, right?  The sticker on my core support shows the LDA connected to the vacuum pump.  ---A


The LDA is pressure operated, not vacuum operated.  Think of the LDA as a mechanism that reduces the amount of fuel delivered when there is no boost.  As boost builds, fuel in increased up to the max allowed by the max fuel screw.  The LDA should be connected to the intake manifold and not the vacuum pump.  With the way you have it connected it might be possible to suck fuel out of the IP and into the engine due to bad seals on the LDA and the vacuum pump.
 


My car is a non-turbo...code ME.  There is no boost to operate it.  From what I understand, the turbo cars use boost pressure on the top of the aneroid pin diaphragm to push it down against the spring under load.  The LDA on the normally aspirated motor uses vacuum on the BOTTOM of the diaphragm to pull it down against the spring under load.  Correct?  Do I have my terms wrong?  I thought the aneroid on the turbos was called a "boost enrichment device" and on the non-turbos it was a "load detection aneroid"?  Is this not right?  Thanks for all your help so far guys! :P   ---A

Reply #8October 06, 2008, 05:08:12 pm

VW_Commuter

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« Reply #8 on: October 06, 2008, 05:08:12 pm »
If your engine is NA and not a TD, then you shouldn't have an LDA on it.  Could it possibly be an altitude compensator?  They look like the LDA.  Can you post a pic of your IP?
Greg

'06 Golf TDI traded in for a '12 Jeep Rubicon (the Phatbox is available)
'91 Jetta TD, a work in progress (I'll do a build thread when I start in earnest)
'65 Notchback, a project not yet started

Reply #9October 06, 2008, 05:13:16 pm

Supersport654

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« Reply #9 on: October 06, 2008, 05:13:16 pm »
Quote from: "jtanguay"
i had a similar problem...  my oil level was rising and it didn't quite look like coolant, but i replaced the oil cooler anyway and the problem went away.  i too thought that diesel was leaking from an injector after shut down because the oil level was rising...  and when i drained the oil it was very difficult to tell if coolant was mixing with the oil.  maybe if i drained it into a big pickle jar or something i would have been able to clearly tell.

i dont know if its because some guys like to really reef on the oil filter or what, but the oil coolers do go.  VW recommends replacing them after any major engine work.  not sure if bearings count, but worth checking out in your case  :wink:

if i were you i would drain the oil into a glass jar and see if the oil separates.  because like the others above, i dont see how diesel fuel can get into the oil other than leaking injectors, and that is assuming your injectors are not faulty.



Good idea...I will do it.
 
But engine oil + coolant + churning motor = chocolate milkshake lookin' mess, right?  

The oil looks fine, at first glance anyway.  Other than being really thin and reading a quart over on the dipstick.  And I don't seem to be losing coolant.  That's what made me think it was diesel in the oil.  Can't be anything other than coolant or diesel, and since i didn't see a mess on the end of the dipstick, I assumed it was diesel.  ---A

Reply #10October 06, 2008, 05:18:08 pm

Supersport654

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« Reply #10 on: October 06, 2008, 05:18:08 pm »
Quote from: "VW_Commuter"
If your engine is NA and not a TD, then you shouldn't have an LDA on it.  Could it possibly be an altitude compensator?  They look like the LDA.  Can you post a pic of your IP?


I thought it was both?  I know that when I turn the aneroid pin to different positions inside the pump it DOES affect how much power I have.  It was my understanding that the altitude compensator was the part that was attached to the RH fenderwell.  I thought it cut vacuum to the LDA at high altitudes, thus reducing the amount of fuel the engine gets when the air is thin...to prevent smoking.  But the LDA on the pump is the same as the one on the turbos...it just works in reverse.  Right?  I think that is what Bentley says, anyway. :shock:

BTW pics are linked in a previous thread.  Where in the Pac NW are you?  I am in Olympia WA.

Reply #11October 06, 2008, 06:35:27 pm

burn_your_money

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« Reply #11 on: October 06, 2008, 06:35:27 pm »
that is the wrong pump for that motor. Not a big deal. The LDA should not be hooked up. You should cap off the barb fitting on the top and leave it alone.

I can't see how you have your injectors hooked up, but they should be hooked up in series with each other, capped off at one end and the other end going into the return fitting on the pump below the LDA. There should be no vacuum sources or pressure sources added into that circuit
Tyler

Reply #12October 06, 2008, 08:06:14 pm

Supersport654

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« Reply #12 on: October 06, 2008, 08:06:14 pm »
Quote from: "burn_your_money"
that is the wrong pump for that motor. Not a big deal. The LDA should not be hooked up. You should cap off the barb fitting on the top and leave it alone.

I can't see how you have your injectors hooked up, but they should be hooked up in series with each other, capped off at one end and the other end going into the return fitting on the pump below the LDA. There should be no vacuum sources or pressure sources added into that circuit


Wrong pump?  It is the pump shown on the vacuum routing sticker on the radiator support.  My car is a 1991 Jetta diesel, VIN WVW21RG1MW239XXX.  Here is a pic of the sticker...

http://i9.photobucket.com/albums/a59/cobrajet25/vacuumsticker002.jpg

If you are talking about the fitting on the top of the diaphragm housing where the boost line from the turbo would come in when you say "barb fitting", then it has already been capped...from the factory.  There is another fitting, above the fuel return fitting, where the line from the vacuum pump goes in.  This fitting is ON the LDA, and apparently is supposed to be connected to vacuum.  I have it hooked up the way the label on the car says to hook it up...hmmmm.  Thanks!

Reply #13October 06, 2008, 08:29:15 pm

zukgod1

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« Reply #13 on: October 06, 2008, 08:29:15 pm »
I'm on my Blackberry so I'm not going to try to load your pics.

NA engines CAN have a LDA on the IP.

AND they are hooked to the vac pump however, they are ran through an altitude compinsator (sp) first that regulates fuel delivery according to atmospheric pressure.
It sounds like yours is hooked up wrong from reading what others have posted. If your oil level is going up you either have a really bad injector because even if it was leaking down after shut off it only hold a table spoon of fuel yes I read you replaced them, so your oil cooler is the other item to address. HD or cracked head is all that's left.
dan

99 Golf TDI (now CNG powered) , 82 TD Caddy

Reply #14October 06, 2008, 08:30:59 pm

zukgod1

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« Reply #14 on: October 06, 2008, 08:30:59 pm »
That was suppose to say HG not HD, I can't edit on the BB :(
dan

99 Golf TDI (now CNG powered) , 82 TD Caddy