Aug 8, 2016 | 07:33 PM
  #1  
Am sure this has been answered somewhere along the way but I just can't find it. I have a 98 with 4.0L. My issue is that I have gas in the oil.

I have checked for pressure on the fuel rail after the jeep sat over night. The pressure was seemed fine. My thinking was that I had a stuck injector leaking down after shut down.

I have not noticed the fuel pump running after shut down causing the cylinders to fill.

I did read somewhere that it could be the fuel pressure regulator on the fuel pump. I have bought a new pump with regulator and will install that shortly.

I will also remove and clean the O2 sensors to remove the carbon build up.

I did have a fuse blown that affected the evap system and that was replaced.

Any other ideas or suggestions that may help me out here?
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Aug 8, 2016 | 10:09 PM
  #2  
Running a 195° thermostat? a little gas in the oil is normal. If it's enough to change the level on the dipstick that's something else.
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Aug 8, 2016 | 10:23 PM
  #3  
Yea when I did my oil change I took 8.5 quarts out.
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Aug 8, 2016 | 10:49 PM
  #4  
Leaking injector, likely.

Any rough running symptoms?
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Aug 9, 2016 | 06:55 AM
  #5  
Runs smooth, just gas in oil which creates a smoke field. Checked the fuel pressure and it is not loosing any.
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Aug 9, 2016 | 08:16 PM
  #6  
Why are you sure it's gas? Have you checked your coolant lately?
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Aug 9, 2016 | 08:20 PM
  #7  
Yes it's definitely gas.
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Aug 9, 2016 | 09:19 PM
  #8  
Quote: Runs smooth, just gas in oil which creates a smoke field. Checked the fuel pressure and it is not loosing any.
What's a "smoke field"?
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Aug 9, 2016 | 09:32 PM
  #9  
Raw gas and carbon out the tail pipe. Excess gas burning off.
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Aug 9, 2016 | 09:45 PM
  #10  
Black smoke?
Can you scan live data to check the output from the CTS? If not you can also test it by measuring the resistance @ ambient temperature.
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Aug 10, 2016 | 08:19 AM
  #11  
I have a scan tool and can see the live CO's just haven't had time to check it at this point.
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Aug 10, 2016 | 01:43 PM
  #12  
Over 1/2 a gallon! Wow. The evap system on my 90 is sort of Passive". Just a vent from the charcoal can to the air cleaner.

Do you ever notice pressure removing the gas cap? Do you top up the tank on fill-up? I'm suspicious of the evac system. 2-1/2 quarts seems like allot from an injector. Sometime when it's smoking maybe pull the line off the can and see if it's wet inside?

I don't mean to distract from checking the CTS.
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Aug 10, 2016 | 04:59 PM
  #13  
Quote: Over 1/2 a gallon! Wow. The evap system on my 90 is sort of Passive". Just a vent from the charcoal can to the air cleaner. Do you ever notice pressure removing the gas cap? Do you top up the tank on fill-up? I'm suspicious of the evac system. 2-1/2 quarts seems like allot from an injector. Sometime when it's smoking maybe pull the line off the can and see if it's wet inside? I don't mean to distract from checking the CTS.
No pressure when removing gas cap. I purposely don't over fill because the last guy that had it didn't seat the O-ring properly on the fuel pump so it leaks if I fill it up.

I know when I bought it he had just changed the charcoal filter and all kinds of sensors. My guess is that he was chasing the same issue. He even put in a new O2 sensor.

I did find a blown fuse which was giving me emissions codes. Once I replaced the fuse it cleared several codes and ran better.

The timing has been checked and is dead on. At this point I am gonna change the fuel pump with new regulator and go from there. But, I will also clean the O2 sensor, plugs and recheck all the vacuum lines.
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Aug 10, 2016 | 05:47 PM
  #14  
Over my head, A Caveman might disconnect the Evap system from the engine completely and see if there is any change. (just to test). (pretty easy I'd think) I suppose a guy should consider anything disconnected from the Evap would be a fire hazard, should be routed away. If you do enough at once we won't know what it was!

Fixing the known gas leak is good. CCKen made a really nifty hatch in his rear compartment to access his pump/regulator, and stuff. Has excellent photos.
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Aug 10, 2016 | 05:52 PM
  #15  
Quote: Over my head, A Caveman might disconnect the Evap system from the engine completely and see if there is any change. (just to test). (pretty easy I'd think) I suppose a guy should consider anything disconnected from the Evap would be a fire hazard, should be routed away. If you do enough at once we won't know what it was! Fixing the known gas leak is good. CCKen made a really nifty hatch in his rear compartment to access his pump/regulator, and stuff. Has excellent photos.
Lol, yea I am only doing one step at a time. I want a definite answer on the issue my self. I just have to make the time to start with the whole process.

I will definitely look into making an access through the floor for future issues.
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