Just rebuilt d750 in my b7100 with new head and have quite a bit of white smoke for a few minutes after start up. Any ideas
What all did you do to the engine? new sleeves, rings, pistons?
How does it start, easy ( light amount of cranking) or hard (lots of cranking).
Have you done a compression test?
Did you use new glow plugs?
Are you using the old injectors or new
any head shaving done?Just rebuilt d750 in my b7100 with new head and have quite a bit of white smoke for a few minutes after start up. Any ideas
Everything was gauged, and mixed. The block was decked. Everything torqued to specs.New sleeves,pistons,rings,seals,gaskets, and whole new upper end. Tried some new aftermarket injectors that didn't work. Put old ones back in. Starts pretty quickly. Only has maybe 2 hrs on rebuild. Smoke stops after a couple minutes.
Everything was gauged, and miced. The block was decked. Everything torqued to specs.
Yes, I did a valve job.Did your new head have valve seals installed?
No rtv used. Oil would cause black smoke, mine smokes white .If it only smokes after a couple minutes, it is oil getting into the exhaust AFTER the combustion chamber, which means exhaust valve guides. Oil going into the combustion chamber gets burned right away and smokes right away at startup. Oil that gets into the exhaust stream after the combustion chamber will not smoke until the exhaust manifold gets hot enough to burn it.
Since your smoke clear up after a while, it is likely that your exhaust valve guides are letting some oil drain into the exhaust ports/manifold while the tractor is off, and then once running and the initial accumulation of oil has been burned, it does not leak quickly enough to add noticeable smoke to the running engine.
This would lead me to the followup question of, is something preventing the top of the cylinder head (under valve cover) from draining oil down into the block properly? It's possible something like a glob of RTV that was squished out into a fluid passage between two mating parts has constricted the flow of oil draining from top to bottom, leading some of it to drain through valve guides before the oil level drops below top of valve guides.