The Oil Leak Game

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tmt502

tmt502

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I bought one of these about a year ago. It’s great for working on the car like finding leaks, checking brake pad wear ( if you don’t want to take the wheel off ), finding that damn bolt you dropped on top of a cross-member or a whole list of crap around the house. Some of them have adjustable LED lights, small hook or magnet. The one I have has a 15’ lead on it. The image shows on your phone and you can choose to take a picture or video.

https://www.ebay.com/itm/352477906922

Thanks for the tip!
 

Danny3737

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That’s better than what I’ve got, but then I think I spent about $18, what did that run you? You could probably perform your own colonoscopy with that thing;)
 

Danny3737

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That’s a pretty decent price. How’s the picture quality? My luck with the quality of HF tools is hit or miss


Yeah, it was $145, but I needed one “right now” and grabbed one from Harbor Freight.
 

iamdub

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Looks like a leak to me. What do you think? I’ve got a new valve cover coming in the next few days.

Why'd you order a new valve cover? All you need is a gasket (or gaskets to do both sides) and maybe the bolt gaskets.


Part of me wants to say the oil on plug 7 is due to it being loose and a leak dripping down onto the plug shield and chasing into the plug well threads. But I know that’s best case scenario. Wouldn’t I be getting a CEL with misfire codes if I had oil getting pumped out of the spark plug well??? I don’t know.

If you had so much oil in the cylinder that it could be "pumped out" and puddle up around the spark plug, then you'd have a dead cylinder if not a bent rod and/or broken piston. I'd say it's oil leaking down into the plug hole then wicking down the threads and burning to them when heated. As for the #7 plug having the most black on it, this could very well be related to the common oil consumption issue with these things. The PCV feeds into the intake manifold and the oil puddles in the back floor of the manifold. It then gets sucked into the rearmost cylinders and burned. Most of it goes into #7 because it is the rearmost cylinder. This is why that one is known to have stuck rings and eventually low compression. Also note that plugs from #1, #4, #6 and #7 are all darkest as they are the AFM cylinders.

Disable AFM and get a catch can!
 
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tmt502

tmt502

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Why'd you order a new valve cover? All you need is a gasket (or gaskets to do both sides) and maybe the bolt gaskets.

If you had so much oil in the cylinder that it could be "pumped out" and puddle up around the spark plug, then you'd have a dead cylinder if not a bent rod and/or broken piston. I'd say it's oil leaking down into the plug hole then wicking down the threads and burning to them when heated. As for the #7 plug having the most black on it, this could very well be related to the common oil consumption issue with these things. The PCV feeds into the intake manifold and the oil puddles in the back floor of the manifold. It then gets sucked into the rearmost cylinders and burned. Most of it goes into #7 because it is the rearmost cylinder. This is why that one is known to have stuck rings and eventually low compression. Also note that plugs from #1, #4, #6 and #7 are all darkest as they are the AFM cylinders.

Disable AFM and get a catch can!

From what I was finding when researching the valve cover leak issue, it appeared that there was a redesign of the valve cover to remedy the leak. We’ll see. It was relatively inexpensive so I figured why not.

So about the AFM disable, what’s the best way to do that? A Range device? Any oil catch cans you’d recommend?
 

wjburken

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That’s a pretty decent price. How’s the picture quality? My luck with the quality of HF tools is hit or miss
Picture quality isn’t too bad at all. I like that’s color and the probe is waterproof. Have used it to check out a drain that was plugged.
E8203B39-DE92-47FD-8484-93DA6EFA9FC3.jpeg
 

iamdub

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From what I was finding when researching the valve cover leak issue, it appeared that there was a redesign of the valve cover to remedy the leak. We’ll see. It was relatively inexpensive so I figured why not.

So about the AFM disable, what’s the best way to do that? A Range device? Any oil catch cans you’d recommend?

The valve cover redesign was not to reduce or remedy a leak, it was to the PCV baffle to reduce oil consumption. There's an inlet hole in the baffle that was ill-placed. It allowed the splashing and/or squirting oil from the rocker arm to go into the hole where it was more easily sucked up into the PCV hose and, ultimately, into the intake manifold. The new cover has this hole relocated. IIRC, all 2010+ got the redesigned cover at the factory, so your '12 should have it.

The good news is that it's not money totally wasted since there are plenty on here that have the older cover and would likely buy it off of you. I bought one for my '08 then found mine had already been changed so I sold it.

The Range is the easiest since it's a simple plug-in device, but it's $200 new. I see them for sale on the forums for $100-$150. I think having it tuned out is best since I wouldn't want this device sticking out from under the dash all the time (it's not much, but still). Plus, there are reports that it can drain your battery if you leave your vehicle parked for extended periods. I don't wanna have to remember to unplug anything like this if I were to park for a while. There's a guy that will turn it off with a tune for $50 (Info here: https://lt1swap.com/afm_delete.htm), but you have to ship him your PCM. If you can wait a few days, this would be the cheapest route for tuning. You can pay for expedited shipping if that still makes it worth it. You could check with your local speed shops to see if they will do it. It's a very straightforward process so any shop worth a crap can do it. I had one near me turn off AFM as well remove the speed limiter and rear (after cat/"downstream") O2 sensors from the tune for $150. No power tuning. The most expensive option would be to get a full custom tune, such as that from Black Bear. Turning off AFM would be the least of the benefits with this. The cleaned up transmission shift tables and other tweaks would make it drive so much better and prolong the life of the trans from the reduced slipping and less gear-hunting.
 

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