Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Gidday

A few days ago I got my rb25det neo all legal and road worthy. That night drove it very spiritedly with what i assume was quite a large boost leak. The turbo sound was loud enough you could hear it while on boost but not off boost. It sounded like a high pitched jet engine and was noticeable from inside the car with the window up and down. I haven't done a boost leak test but I will get onto that.

The next day driving the car across town i noticed when the car gets upto temp, every time you drive without stoping for a while, then start to slow down and go thought the gears, each gear shift a large puff of white/grey smoke would billow out of the exhaust, and when coming to a stop/stopped completely a very large could of smoke would come billowing out of the exhaust!

My thoughts were in this order. Loud turbo noise = boost leak -> excessive turbine speed to achieve 12 psi = turbo wheel reaching unsafe rpm's = wrecked turbo.
After some googling i'm leaning toward the fact that the turbo seals are leaking oil causing oil to burn in the exhaust. I have checked there is no sign of oil in my water or water in my oil.
Is there anyway of knowing what has actually happened or what is happening to my engine/turbo? Is it time for a new turbo? or has my head gasket blown?

The car runs very smooth on idle and drive perfectly fine, it can still boost but i assume this passed more oil through the turbo burning more oil (if that is actually whats happening).

Any help is appreciated thanks!

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/453945-neo-rb25-blowing-lots-of-smoke/
Share on other sites

white/grey smoke I believe points toward oil/coolant being burnt after the engine?? so would point toward worn turbo seals, then noise maybe from broken/leaking gaskets bolts or shaft play.

If your guage takes pressure readings from the intake manifold and its 12psi, then it could be 14psi at the turbo which would probably kill a stock turbo if its old which it is.

Edited by AngryRB

Cheers Mark, i believe your right about the seals, but I am fairly certain the car isn't using any water, the coolant is still very green.

No I have not done a compression test but I will get onto that. The car doesn't feel down on power at all but the smoke is very unnerving as you could imagine.

Turbocharger seals don't fail as such, worn or damaged turbocharger bearings fail and that will allow oil to leak through the seals.

Many years ago my 33 RB25DET had a piston ringland let go, no loss of power, no loss of boost, no coolant/oil mix issues, no abnormal noises, no signs of anything untowards in the catch can... white oil smoke out the exhaust was the only indicator.

My RB25 has a suspected ring land failure, has 90psi in on cylinder 5 ( always seem to be the cylinders at near the firewall ) but I never had any smoke,

certainly chugged like a train though,

Cheers Mark, i believe your right about the seals, but I am fairly certain the car isn't using any water, the coolant is still very green.

Coolant will not be contaminated if the seals in the turbo are gone. But you will use/burn coolant and a little bit goes a long way. So what you see could be from a very small amount.

It only blows smoke when slowing down eg, down sifting with no throttle a puff comes out then when stopped it comes out in a big plume.
Turbo has about 1mm of in/out shaft play so i assume thats f**ked and about .3mm of up/down play. If it were blowing oil past the seals there would be signs of burnt oil in the down and exhaust housing of the turbo? idk what im looking at so heres a few pics of them, if someone can tell me if these are normal looking or not.
There is some signs of oil in the outlet pipes of the turbo, only small amounts coating the outside of the pipes. I was thrashing it the whole day before running 12psi with a possible boost leak so this is why i'm assuming its the turbo but i'm not sure.

post-134814-0-75360700-1424419660_thumb.jpg

post-134814-0-36074700-1424419662_thumb.jpg

post-134814-0-90813100-1424419663_thumb.jpg

post-134814-0-35299300-1424419665_thumb.jpg

Its a tough one, doesn't look stuffed to me, id try the comp test and also look at the plugs, and also the train chug as mentioned, might give some answers

You can get smoke like that under vacumn when the valve guides are rooted, first start up in morning would probably see white smoke out the tail pipe, and again when idling for long time then reviing it.. could check that too.

Edited by AngryRB

bought another turbo from a R33 gtst, slapped it on and no more smoke!
After taking it for another drive down to the petrol station and back to get some gas i took the dump off and everything was coated with burnt oil! waste gate was black, 02 sensor was black and so was the dump!
Must of been the seals.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Definitely didn't put a N/A cluster in instead? The speed sensor (location) is different in both cars.... I think. This will obviously stuff things up.
    • Nah not the throwout bearing, it's something internal. I already replaced the throwout bearing. Mechanic misdiagnosed my car and thought it was a spigot bearing, went to another bloke who said it was an input shaft bearing. (I replaced everything when I pulled out the gearbox but didn't open up the gearbox.   In this video at timestamp 6:05 : Mine has the same sound  min
    • It is definitely to space it out and away for clearance during compression, and possibly for spring clearance to upper arm. That latter would only be true for springs that are same-ish diameter to stockers, and so that probably doesn't apply to Teins or most other coilovers.
    • Yeah, a mechanic who knows these cars told me even if I get a brand new gearbox the noise will return but will be less noticeable. I've heard someone also they this noise came back after 3,000km on a new or reconditioned gearbox. It is pretty f**king annoying though just hearing groaning most of the time lol. I wonder if an aftermarket input shaft bearing would fix the problem or how they are built.
    • All RB gearbags, especially the big turbo box, have rollover noise. Mine certainly does. Always has. Sometimes is worse than others - no particular idea why, although it is probably temperature related. I have smurf jizz in mine and have had to have it in there from the first day the box went into teh car. It simply would not select gears with the engine on, on day one, with normal oil in there. And so, the blue stuff has probably ruined almost everything synchro related in the box. But it has taken 12 or 13 years to get to the point where I simply must replace the box. It has become increasingly baulky of late, which might be symptomatic of the way I've been driving it, as much as anything. I shall have to make some corrections when teh new box goes in. Input shaft bearing noise will decrease with clutch pedal pressed because the drive is removed. But yes, more often than not noises that work like that are associated with the throwout. It won't matter either way, new box will mean this one can be relegated to the parts pile.
×
×
  • Create New...