Use of Dye and Black Light for Diagnosis
Posted: Mon Mar 12, 2012 11:54 pm
Hi Guys,
Spent some time tonight trying to find an oil leak on a 710m. I knew it was coming from the #1 cylinder area, I figured push rod tube seals or some such. Brian had been using some automotive test dyes for some drivetrain filming. Decided to try some of this stuff out for myself. Wow. .5 oz, ran the engine for 5 minutes while syncing carbs and then turned on the blue light. Perfect blue streak running up the motor to above the #1 cylinder. Popped off the front engine tin and here I have a puddle of die/oil on top of the #1 cylinder.
Very clear that the push rod tube seals were dry. Put a wrench on the bottom of the lifter housing nut and got an easy 100-120 degrees of turn with minimal effort. Cleaned it all off with some solvent. Fired the engine back up.....leak gone. I wish they could all be this simple. I am pretty amazed at the dye and how quickly it allowed us to diagnose the leak. With as cheap as this stuff is, it should definitely be considered if you are hunting down a leak.
Cheers,
Scott
Spent some time tonight trying to find an oil leak on a 710m. I knew it was coming from the #1 cylinder area, I figured push rod tube seals or some such. Brian had been using some automotive test dyes for some drivetrain filming. Decided to try some of this stuff out for myself. Wow. .5 oz, ran the engine for 5 minutes while syncing carbs and then turned on the blue light. Perfect blue streak running up the motor to above the #1 cylinder. Popped off the front engine tin and here I have a puddle of die/oil on top of the #1 cylinder.
Very clear that the push rod tube seals were dry. Put a wrench on the bottom of the lifter housing nut and got an easy 100-120 degrees of turn with minimal effort. Cleaned it all off with some solvent. Fired the engine back up.....leak gone. I wish they could all be this simple. I am pretty amazed at the dye and how quickly it allowed us to diagnose the leak. With as cheap as this stuff is, it should definitely be considered if you are hunting down a leak.
Cheers,
Scott