1971 engine : a lot of white smoke from exhaust and breather pipe

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The engine had 5000 km from new.
Yesterday after 60 km. done from the right exhaust and the breater oil tank (this hose goes not in the air filter but fre accross the rear fender under to the the licenze plate) it started out a lot of white smoke.
What do you think is happened?.
For a complete information the bike had new oil red Castrol 25/50 and new oil filter and mounts the Jim Comstock sump filter breather.
Thank you.
Ciao
Piero
 
Condensation from inside the engine and emulsified in the oil?

See if it goes away with more KM before panicking too much...
 
Condensation from inside the engine and emulsified in the oil?

See if it goes away with more KM before panicking too much...

Hi.
What means "condensation from inside the engine and emulsified in the oil?".
In case why?
Thank you.
Piero
 
Blowby, combustion chamber air forcing past the rings and going into the crankcase. Could also come past the guides into the Rockerbox.
 
Condensation is “water which collects as droplets on a cold surface when humid air is in contact with it”.

So, humid air and a cold engine left to stood for a length of time could well result in condensation inside the engine.

Emulsified means the water is mixed thoroughly into the oil (by the oil pump etc).

My thinking is that the vapour created when the oil is heated might show as ‘white smoke’ in the tank vent pipe when the emulsified oil returns to the tank and the hot / vaporised water separates from the oil.

From my recollection, when talking about exhaust smoke: oil smoke is blue, rich mixture smoke is black, and white smoke is from ‘burning’ water. Hence my thought.

But, ‘tis just a thought.

Do please let us know what you eventually discover.
 
Condensation is “water which collects as droplets on a cold surface when humid air is in contact with it”.

So, humid air and a cold engine left to stood for a length of time could well result in condensation inside the engine.

Emulsified means the water is mixed thoroughly into the oil (by the oil pump etc).

My thinking is that the vapour created when the oil is heated might show as ‘white smoke’ in the tank vent pipe when the emulsified oil returns to the tank and the hot / vaporised water separates from the oil.

From my recollection, when talking about exhaust smoke: oil smoke is blue, rich mixture smoke is black, and white smoke is from ‘burning’ water. Hence my thought.

But, ‘tis just a thought.

Do please let us know what you eventually discover.

Water!!
Why the engine makes wather?.
Please let me understand better.
Thank you.
Piero
 
the "water" comes from the humidity in the atmosphere inside the crankcase,... BUT after an engine heats up, all the water that has condensed inside the engine is boiled off and exits the crankcase via the breather on the engine into the oil tank. Then, once the engine oil is hot, the water in the oil tank is vaporized and exits out the oil tank breather hose.

If you have white smoke coming out of the tail pipe, then your problem isn't water vapor. More likely it's a valve guide leak, an intake valve seal is bad, or your piston rings/bore is allowing oil to leak past them.
 
Water!!
Why the engine makes wather?.
Please let me understand better.
Thank you.
Piero
Piero, I am assuming this is just a translation issue. Here is an example in, hopefully simple, English. Condensation: when you take a hot shower on a cold day the water that is on the bathroom mirror is condensation. Another example would be the outside of a chilled glass of Prosecco on a humid day. So, for example, if you keep your bike in a cool garage and then take it outside on a hot, humid day, you can get condensation (water) inside the engine just like you get it on the mirror in the bathroom. More commonly condensation gets created in the engine when temperature and humidity changes occur relatively quickly in an enclosed garage. If you don't run your bike up to full operating temperature some of the condensation (water) can partially separate from the oil (emulsify) and look like traces of mayonnaise on the inside of your oil tank near the cap or even get blown out of whatever kind of breather you have. For some reason 650cc Triumphs do this pretty often and it is common to see it trapped in the "D" cross section breather hose on the rear fender.
 
Condensation won't cause white smoke out the mufflers. Just one cylinder or both? Does your bike have a cross over pipe between the exhaust header pipes? If it's just one side may be little rubber seal on the intake valve has split. Apparently it can be repaired with out pulling the head.
 
What bike are we talking about. You have the same question on Triples on Line. So is it a Trident, Commando or both?
 
What bike are we talking about. You have the same question on Triples on Line. So is it a Trident, Commando or both?
Hi.
Both bikes, commando and R3.
Same problems.
Commando only right silencer, R3 both.
Piero
 
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I'm having a hard time getting my head around this. How can two different bikes simultaneously develop the same symptoms. It's got to be something they have in common, gas, environment, ?
 
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Were the bikes started and not ridden a distance when the weather was cold?
 
I still say it sounds like condensation in the engine and oil.

Take them for a good long run, get them properly hot. I’ll bet this ‘problem’ just goes away.
 
Continuing with the ‘white smoke = water’ hypothesis...

Is your fuel high in ethanol?

Ethonal is hygroscopic, meaning it absorbs water out of the atmosphere. If it’s been in the bikes a while, perhaps it could be a contributory factor.
 
Continuing with the ‘white smoke = water’ hypothesis...

Is your fuel high in ethanol?

Ethonal is hygroscopic, meaning it absorbs water out of the atmosphere. If it’s been in the bikes a while, perhaps it could be a contributory factor.

We dont have ethanol fuel in Italy.
Ciao.
Piero
 
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