Vinces87
Member
Hello out there! Glad I ran into this forum. read a lot of what everyone has to say and thought I'd throw this at you.
My first mistake was trusting Jiffy Lube to do an oil change. I was in a hurry because I'd planned a weekend trip. They finsished the job, and I was on my way. Not very far though. I got maybe 20 miles down the road (if that) and looked in the mirror. The car was blowing considerable smoke out of both tail pipes. The smoke appeared white and almost looked like steam as it seemed to dissapate quickly instead of leaving a "smoke trail". I did not notice any big change in the motor audibly but pulled it over none the less. I got it home and popped the hood. I didn't see anything out of the norm. No oil spattered anywhere, oil filler cap was there, fan clutch was working (yes, I started it
)
1987 Convertible
There's a little over 108K miles on it. They used 5-30W in it which I think was a mistake but the old timer convinced me that's what should be used.
Anyone have any idea what it could be? From what I have read white smoke could almost mean anything. Who better to ask than those that have been there- done that. Thanks in advance for anything you can add.
My first mistake was trusting Jiffy Lube to do an oil change. I was in a hurry because I'd planned a weekend trip. They finsished the job, and I was on my way. Not very far though. I got maybe 20 miles down the road (if that) and looked in the mirror. The car was blowing considerable smoke out of both tail pipes. The smoke appeared white and almost looked like steam as it seemed to dissapate quickly instead of leaving a "smoke trail". I did not notice any big change in the motor audibly but pulled it over none the less. I got it home and popped the hood. I didn't see anything out of the norm. No oil spattered anywhere, oil filler cap was there, fan clutch was working (yes, I started it
1987 Convertible
There's a little over 108K miles on it. They used 5-30W in it which I think was a mistake but the old timer convinced me that's what should be used.
Anyone have any idea what it could be? From what I have read white smoke could almost mean anything. Who better to ask than those that have been there- done that. Thanks in advance for anything you can add.




