HDJ81V developing blue smoke

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Sorry for the late reply, don't worry I did not forget. Today I was driving the cruiser and it smoked a little until it warmed up, after it seemed fine.

The truck has 150,000 Km's on it. It ran great in BC running the low sulfur diesel. could it be the crappy diesel in edmonton? I filled up at Shell near yellowhead and 170st.

The car is running Quakerstate 15w40 oil right now, i changed the filter as well. The oil looked black of course, but still felt like oil, not oil and diesel together.

Where do you guys get your diesel.

As far the injection pump leak, i'm replacing the o-ring as soon as 4wheel auto gets it in along with the fuel filter.
 
NationalParkANZACweekend016.jpg


NationalParkANZACweekend022.jpg


Yes yes, its an old thread, but thought i would post incase it gives someone piece of mind........:)


Notice a common theme????

The Grey cruiser has 300,000+k's on the clock and the maroon cruiser has done 120,000k's.

Thats running slowly in low range. They all do it regardless of age and condition. Its injection related.

Mine is the Maroon cruiser, and it is currently in the shop getting the injectors overhauled. I am getting them set to a higher burst pressure and having the pump timing advanced. That should complement the adjustments i am going to make to off boost fuel compensator. (adjustments that get the turbo boosting at 1000rpm rather than the factory spec 2500rpm ;))

I have a tech article on how to make the adjustments if anyone is interested, where do i post it??
 
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I have a tech article on how to make the adjustments if anyone is interested, where do i post it??

Open a new thread in the diesel section and let us know ..

On a side note .. the factory 1HD-T settings, place your turbo CT26 running at full boost @ 2000 rpm ..
 
I have said over and over, if you are unsure if the smoke is fuel or engine oil, take a good smell of your tail pipe. If it smells like burnt motor oil (blue), it could be your turbo, valve guide seals or your oil rings. If it smells like diesel (black or white), then usually it is your fuel filter, air filter, injectors or injector pump. Also, make sure your valves are properly adjusted - something I need to do soon myself.
 
NationalParkANZACweekend016.jpg


NationalParkANZACweekend022.jpg


Yes yes, its an old thread, but thought i would post incase it gives someone piece of mind........:)


Notice a common theme????

The Grey cruiser has 300,000+k's on the clock and the maroon cruiser has done 120,000k's.

Thats running slowly in low range. They all do it regardless of age and condition. Its injection related.

Doesnt tally with my observations. Every text book I have seen says oil burn as blue smoke and injection problems as black smoke.

Low range ,high rpms with little load on the engine as in the river bed crossing should be fairly clean.
 
I should also mention that the low grade fuels we get here in NZ and the same with you guys in the US compared to the highend stuff they get in Japan has a big impact on the injection system.The blue smoke is a combination of low injection pressures (poor fuel atomisation), a direct injection engine, cool/cold out side air, cooler than optimum bore temperatures (engines not working hard so bore temps drop) and constant low rev running in low range.The blue smoke is unburnt diesel. Its smelly eye stinging smoke, not like the distinctive burnt oil smell ;)
 
Tried to copy and past the tech article here but no go. The format gets messed up and it gets very hard to read!!!!!
 
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Tried to copy and past the tech article here but no go. The format gets messed up and it gets very hard to read!!!!!

Put it into a word processing prg like MS Word. Select All and then select remove all formating. Then you just past it in your post as plain text. Or even easier, just post the link. to the article.
 
I should also mention that the low grade fuels we get here in NZ and the same with you guys in the US compared to the highend stuff they get in Japan has a big impact on the injection system.The blue smoke is a combination of low injection pressures (poor fuel atomisation), a direct injection engine, cool/cold out side air, cooler than optimum bore temperatures (engines not working hard so bore temps drop) and constant low rev running in low range.The blue smoke is unburnt diesel. Its smelly eye stinging smoke, not like the distinctive burnt oil smell ;)

Wow, what a great explanation, the best I have read yet, and explains perfectly the faint bluish smoke I get when starting and after some idling when the engine is cold or cool...

Although my engine was burning Mobil1 during the first winter at an alarming rate (1l/5000km), it has burnt almost no oil at all (less than 1l for 15,000km!) when using synthetic Rotella and I still get that slight bluish oil puff thing when starting the engine and after extended idling!

Are you a forensic research investigator, Diesel_Boy? You've convinced me, Sherlock! :cheers:
 
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1HD-FT Performance Adjustments________________________________________The '95 - '98 multi valve factory turbo diesel motor (1HD-FT) is a great motor with gobs of go and gobs of torque. Because however it has a larger turbo housing and is tuned for tight emissions, the off boost response is light. This can be alleviated with simple injector pump adjustment. It's not a difficult task and the results are impressive indeed. Adjustments are required to two components of the injector pump and does not affect the factory seal on the maximum injection volume screw. Adjustments are required to the boost compensator characteristic tendency and to the maximum off boost injection volume screw. Boost compensator characteristic tendencyThe stock boost compensator characteristic tendency on the injector pump is set very conservatively on this motor. This can result in lack lustre performance until you get the boost wound up. It varies quite widely from car to car and I've driven a couple that were quite bad down low. The boost compensator is the diaphragm that sits on top of the fuel pump. On the rear face (towards the rear of the car), just under the diaphragm is a 12 mm bolt (from memory) with a rubber drain cover/tube covering it (Aussie spec only. The European models have that BACS tube in there). Pull the rubber cover off and undo the bolt. Depending on which tools you use, you may have to remove the fuel inlet pipe first. It's tight in there.... Inside the hole is a toothed wheel sitting on the horizontal plane. You can see it if you grow a 3rd hand, shine a light in there and hold an inspection mirror just right. You don't need to see it though..... Insert a smallish blade screw driver (holding the blade in the vertical plane) and get it on the teeth of the toothed wheel. Now push the end of the screw driver away from the motor (to turn the wheel clockwise when viewed from above). As the wheel turns, you'll hear a faint click as each tooth pushes against a detent spring. You need to turn it 2 or 3 clicks. Re-install everything being careful not to over tighten the bolts. They screw into soft aluminium. What this tweak does is to allow the pump to inject more fuel at low to moderate boost pressure. It doesn't affect the maximum injection volume, so you're not over stressing the motor. Another benefit is that it'll pull harder as it approaches red line. There's no noticeable difference in smoke and the net effect is better economy. You'll end up shifting sooner and not having to rev the motor to get going quickly. Don't be greedy however by screwing it down much further. The gotcha is that it does inject more as the boost drops close to red line and you can get alarmingly high combustion temperatures when revving hard for any length of time. Maximum off boost injection volumeThis adjustment determines how much fuel is injected when there is no boost. Once boost begins increasing, the boost compensator characteristic tendency described above takes over. By increasing the volume of fuel injected, there is more torque available under no boost conditions with the added bonus that with more fuel, more exhaust energy is available to spin the turbo up quicker. The adjustment screw is found on top of the boost compensator diaphragm and usually has a dab of yellow inspection paint over it (it may however have flaked off with engine washing ;-) Make a note of its stock position for reference. To adjust, loosen the lock nut and screw the adjustment screw in. Initially, turn it in half a turn and tighten the lock nut. Now it's a matter of trial and error. Warm the engine up and test the adjustment by looking for a light puff of black smoke as you hit the accelerator from idle. You can repeat the procedure and keep increasing the adjustment half a turn at a time until you do see an increase in smoke. Try to keep the smoke to a minimum when you do finally find a screw setting that suits your engine. This will have a noticeable effect in the off idle response and can have the turbo spinning up and boosting right down from 1,000 rpm. A word of caution however. With all this new-found torque at low boost, don't be tempted to lug it up long hills simply because it now can. Bearings don't like being hammered. I did this mod to mine 6 or so months ago and jumping into a stock TD now it's noticeable just how different it is. Cheers gc ________________________________________The week before last, I visited Dave Webster at Cooma Diesel in Fyshwick (in Canberra) to discuss our vehicle and some rather sluggish behaviour in low-end acceleration. They test drove it for me and said that it was indeed sluggish and that it definitely needed attention in the fuel-pump. They said that whilst in factory-spec, the spec was wide in its tolerance and mine was in the very very lower end of "acceptable". They arranged for me to contact Toyota (which I did) and review the vehicle for work to be carried out under warranty. This I duly was granted, and did without my truck for three days whilst they (Cooma diesel) worked on the fuel pump on behalf of Toyota. The results? Unbelievable. There is heaps more power/acceleration from 1,000 rpm to 2,500 rpm and there's more top-end power too. Before nothing so much would happen over 3,500 rpm; now... much more acceleration and power. It's a different vehicle... What Cooma Diesel did was to re-calibrate the fuel pump and run it up on the dyno to make sure it was at its optimum. They didn't touch the injectors, or spray patterns or anything like that, just re-calibrated the pump. And all done under warranty - the cheapest upgrade I have ever had. For those who own the 1HD-FT (esp. if it is still in warranty), try what I did - it could give you a huge boost... BTW, great service from Cooma Diesel - extremely knowledgeable and very helpful. Regards, Chris
 
Sorry, i have tried and tried, and thats the best i get. Grrrrrr
 
Wow, great info! I presume it applies in principle to the 1HD-T as well?
 
Doesnt tally with my observations. Every text book I have seen says oil burn as blue smoke and injection problems as black smoke.

Low range ,high rpms with little load on the engine as in the river bed crossing should be fairly clean.

That smoke is closer to white from incomplete combustion. If you've ever had a turbo or valve stem seal go, then you'll know how blue real oil smoke is.

Or just follow a petrol mitsubishi.:)
 
That smoke is closer to white from incomplete combustion. If you've ever had a turbo or valve stem seal go, then you'll know how blue real oil smoke is.

Or just follow a petrol mitsubishi.:)

I think its the light but the the 1st pic still looks blueish on my screen. And yes I have seen how real blue smoke is. Ive seen it bad enough to turn brown
 
Not bad, but it's still hard to OCR ;)

OK, I used the text you pasted in a previous post and formatted it to look like the scans you posted in your previous post, so here goes:

1HD-FT Performance Adjustments​

The '95 - '98 multi valve factory turbo diesel motor (1HD-FT) is a great motor with gobs of go and gobs of torque. Because however it has a larger turbo housing and is tuned for tight emissions, the off boost response is light. This can be alleviated with simple injector pump adjustment. It's not a difficult task and the results are impressive indeed.

Adjustments are required to two components of the injector pump and does not affect the factory seal on the maximum injection volume screw. Adjustments are required to the boost compensator characteristic tendency and to the maximum off boost injection volume screw.


Boost compensator characteristic tendency

The stock boost compensator characteristic tendency on the injector pump is set very conservatively on this motor. This can result in lack lustre performance until you get the boost wound up. It varies quite widely from car to car and I've driven a couple that were quite bad down low.

The boost compensator is the diaphragm that sits on top of the fuel pump. On the rear face (towards the rear of the car), just under the diaphragm is a 12 mm bolt (from memory) with a rubber drain cover/tube covering it (Aussie spec only. The European models have that BACS tube in there). Pull the rubber cover off and undo the bolt. Depending on which tools you use, you may have to remove the fuel inlet pipe first. It's tight in there....

Inside the hole is a toothed wheel sitting on the horizontal plane. You can see it if you grow a 3rd hand, shine a light in there and hold an inspection mirror just right. You don't need to see it though.....

Insert a smallish blade screw driver (holding the blade in the vertical plane) and get it on the teeth of the toothed wheel. Now push the end of the screw driver away from the motor (to turn the wheel clockwise when viewed from above). As the wheel turns, you'll hear a faint click as each tooth pushes against a detent spring. You need to turn it 2 or 3 clicks.

Re-install everything being careful not to over tighten the bolts. They screw into soft aluminium.

What this tweak does is to allow the pump to inject more fuel at low to moderate boost pressure. It doesn't affect the maximum injection volume, so you're not over stressing the motor. Another benefit is that it'll pull harder as it approaches red line. There's no noticeable difference in smoke and the net effect is better economy. You'll end up shifting sooner and not having to rev the motor to get going quickly.

Don't be greedy however by screwing it down much further. The gotcha is that it does inject more as the boost drops close to red line and you can get alarmingly high combustion temperatures when revving hard for any length of time.


Maximum off boost injection volume

This adjustment determines how much fuel is injected when there is no boost. Once boost begins increasing, the boost compensator characteristic tendency described above takes over. By increasing the volume of fuel injected, there is more torque available under no boost conditions with the added bonus that with more fuel, more exhaust energy is available to spin the turbo up quicker.

The adjustment screw is found on top of the boost compensator diaphragm and usually has a dab of yellow inspection paint over it (it may however have flaked off with engine washing ;-) Make a note of its stock position for reference. To adjust, loosen the lock nut and screw the adjustment screw in. Initially, turn it in half a turn and tighten the lock nut.

Now it's a matter of trial and error. Warm the engine up and test the adjustment by looking for a light puff of black smoke as you hit the accelerator from idle. You can repeat the procedure and keep increasing the adjustment half a turn at a time until you do see an increase in smoke.

Try to keep the smoke to a minimum when you do finally find a screw setting that suits your engine.

This will have a noticeable effect in the off idle response and can have the turbo spinning up and boosting right down from 1,000 rpm.

A word of caution however. With all this new-found torque at low boost, don't be tempted to lug it up long hills simply because it now can. Bearings don't like being hammered.

I did this mod to mine 6 or so months ago and jumping into a stock TD now it's noticeable just how different it is.

Cheers
gc



Note from 83bj60: I suppose the following was a quote in the original post

____________________________________________


The week before last, I visited Dave Webster at Cooma Diesel in Fyshwick (in Canberra) to discuss our vehicle and some rather sluggish behaviour in low-end acceleration.

They test drove it for me and said that it was indeed sluggish and that it definitely needed attention in the fuel-pump. They said that whilst in factory-spec, the spec was wide in its tolerance and mine was in the very very lower end of "acceptable".

They arranged for me to contact Toyota (which I did) and review the vehiNote by 83bj60: I suppose the following was a quotecle for work to be carried out under warranty. This I duly was granted, and did without my truck for three days whilst they (Cooma diesel) worked on the fuel pump on behalf of Toyota.

The results? Unbelievable. There is heaps more power/acceleration from 1,000 rpm to 2,500 rpm and there's more top-end power too. Before nothing so much would happen over 3,500 rpm; now... much more acceleration and power. It's a different vehicle... What Cooma Diesel did was to re-calibrate the fuel pump and run it up on the dyno to make sure it was at its optimum. They didn't touch the injectors, or spray patterns or anything like that, just re-calibrated the pump. And all done under warranty - the cheapest upgrade I have ever had.

For those who own the 1HD-FT (esp. if it is still in warranty), try what I did - it could give you a huge boost... BTW, great service from Cooma Diesel - extremely knowledgeable and very helpful.

Regards,
Chris

________________________________________________

If there are any typos from my formatting, please let me know and I will correct them.

-83bj60
 
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Now... Is there a big difference between the injection pump on the 1HD-FT and the 1HD-FT? In other words, how does it apply to our more 'pedestrian' 1HD-Ts?
 

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