Thank you Dandy, you have inspired me, perhaps I should
have gone to bed early last night !!!.
Pure white smoke from the exhaust is condensed water
vapour. All engines burning hydrocarbon fuels produce
water vapour all the time due to the hydrogen content.
The main elements of diesal fuel are approximately:
Carbon 87 %
Hydrogen 10.5 %
Sulpher 0.05 % or less
Nitrogen 1 %
Oxygen 1 %
In the burning process, 1 atom of carbon combines with
2 atoms of oxygen and produces CO2 ( carbon dioxide ).
2 atoms of hydrogen combine with 1 atom of oxygen and
produces H2O ( water ).
The sulpher combines to sulpher dioxide ( sulphuric acid )
and nitrogen combines to nitrous oxide.
Due to the high combustion temperatures, the water is in
the form of steam, steam is invisable, you can only see
it when it condenses into water vapour. On a warm day
with low humidity, the steam is absorbed into the
atmosphere and so never becomes visable, on a cold day
the steam condenses immediately it leaves the exhaust
system and becomes visable as water vapour until such
time as the exhaust temperature is high enough to stop
condensation and the water vapour disperses before it
becomes visable.
So, why would an engine start normally, and then after
a short time start to run "lumpy" and produce excess
amounts of water vapour from the exhaust pipe ?.
Excess water vapour normally results from water in the
exhaust system evaporating, when the engine is first
started, however, this should not effect the engine
and leads one to suspect that a small amount of coolant
water is leaking into a cylinder overnight. When the
engine fires, the water will evaporate to steam and so
quench the combustion process until all the water has
cleared from the cylinder.
Given a good battery, and all else is in good condition,
the Bongo will normally start with 3 active glow plugs.
The engine will run "lumpy" for a few seconds until
the deprived cylinder gets up to a reasonable combustion
temperature. If you only have 2 active glow plugs, the
engine probably will not start in coldish conditions
but you can hear it knocking in it's attempts to achieve
power.
If there is a defective glow plug and the engine starts,
then it would help to depress the accelerator very
slightly, any more than this will only increase the
vibration to a point where you may cause damage.
All the above of course is pure conjecture, and may be
a load of garbage, if so, then I apologise for that.
