Joeiconic
Well-Known Member
if he only had a little fuel in his oil that wouldn‘t happen.Looks like someone was a little late for their oil change.
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if he only had a little fuel in his oil that wouldn‘t happen.Looks like someone was a little late for their oil change.
Coolant leaking to oil.I would love to know what actually caused that to happen.
I've always seen that as creating a milkshake like liquid - I've never seen it gel like that.Coolant leaking to oil.
You need slow and long leak for that to happen. Slow enough that the water in the coolant/anti-freeze mix get's vaporized without you noticing a billowing white cloud behind you and then the antifreeze chemically bonds with the oil making this gelatin-ish substance.I've always seen that as creating a milkshake like liquid - I've never seen it gel like that.
Honesty think it was a YouTube clicks video. No way oil will coagulate like that without residue. That engine was flushed before they added some compound that’s activated by heat. They sacrificed an engine just for laughsI've always seen that as creating a milkshake like liquid - I've never seen it gel like that.
Interesting - I've had two instances where I've had coolant in anti freeze but those were both catastrophic failures (one was a hole punched in the head itself and one was a head gasket failure).You need slow and long leak for that to happen. Slow enough that the water in the coolant/anti-freeze mix get's vaporized without you noticing a billowing white cloud behind you and then the antifreeze chemically bonds with the oil making this gelatin-ish substance.
Too much water and you get the milkshake.
Interesting - I've had two instances where I've had coolant in anti freeze but those were both catastrophic failures (one was a hole punched in the head itself and one was a head gasket failure).You need slow and long leak for that to happen. Slow enough that the water in the coolant/anti-freeze mix get's vaporized without you noticing a billowing white cloud behind you and then the antifreeze chemically bonds with the oil making this gelatin-ish substance.
Too much water and you get the milkshake.
Possibly, but I found this interesting thread that talks about the issue:Honesty think it was a YouTube clicks video. No way oil will coagulate like that without residue. That engine was flushed before they added some compound that’s activated by heat. They sacrificed an engine just for laughs