This really sounds like a glow plug issue to me. Your mistake in diagnosing the problem is not checking all 4 glow plugs and going off on a tangent. You probably have 1 or 2 bad glow plugs and the smoke is from the cylinders with good glow plugs partially combusting the fuel. Did you put in AC Delco or Champion glow plugs by chancet? They are junk and don't last. One of the best tool I have to diagnose glow plug problems is a non contact ammeter. It takes seconds to check if all glow plugs are working. I'll post some pics of it later
Glow plugs from Prothe huh? Don't use anything except Bosch. If you can find Bosch Duraterms get them. It's not worth screwing around with junk with a critical part like a glow plug. Burning out prematurely is easy to stomach but if the tips fall off (this does happen with cheap glow plugs) you stand to blow up the engine. Hey, I have $80 worth of parts I bought from Prothe which I will never use. Do you want to take them off my hand at a discount?
Can you tell me more about this non-contact ammeter? I think I have one but I didn't think it would work with DC except for a momentary spike. How are you using it?
Quote from: SolarSteve on December 17, 2009, 01:54:09 pmCan you tell me more about this non-contact ammeter? I think I have one but I didn't think it would work with DC except for a momentary spike. How are you using it?Most clamp-ons use a simple loop pickup and so can only measure AC amps in "clamp-on" mode, but there's a more expensive version of the clamp-on ammeter that uses an internal Hall effect transducer to measure DC amps when clamped around a conductor.
Are the GP's from German Auto Parts good? They don't say what brand they are.
Is there anyway of telling one from another?
Quote from: libbybapa on December 16, 2009, 01:08:58 pmUnless I missed it, you only confirmed that one of the glow plugs is working. The other three could be burned out.So, what did I win? It seems you chased your tail for quite some time after testing that one glow plug. FWIW, that's why I don't like inconclusive tests.If you loosen the unions at the injectors and crank until the fuel starts flowing from there, then it takes less cranking overall and once the unions are tightened it starts right up. It does make a bit more of a mess, tho.
Unless I missed it, you only confirmed that one of the glow plugs is working. The other three could be burned out.