milky stuff on dipstick
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From: Saginaw Mi area
Year: 1994
Model: Cherokee
Engine: 4.0
I have some milky stuff on the 4.0 engine oil dip stick. I've watched the coolant level etc, and haven't seen any loss of it. And no bubbles in the coolant in the radiator.
The dip stick has been like that for a couple months, and when I changed the oil, it looked normal.
Not to muddy this up, but I had a Pontiac years ago that always had that stuff on the dip stick, which rusted it.
Any ideas ??????
Bill
The dip stick has been like that for a couple months, and when I changed the oil, it looked normal.
Not to muddy this up, but I had a Pontiac years ago that always had that stuff on the dip stick, which rusted it.
Any ideas ??????
Bill
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From: Lost in the wilds of Virginia
Year: 1998 Classic (I'll get it running soon....) and 02 Grand
Model: Cherokee (XJ)
Engine: 4.0
Milky stuff on the dipstick means water in the oil. How it got there is another question.
You probably have a blown head gasket or a cracked head. Face reality now, or face it later. There was a thread here just a couple of months ago with someone insisting his problems could not be a cracked head. He was adamant it couldn't be a cracked head. The thread turned into a "how I rebuilt my engine and replaced my cracked head" thread. He did a great job on it, too, once he faced reality.
You can find out for sure by buying a test kit at your local parts store. Tell them you need a test kit for combustion gasses in your coolant.
You probably have a blown head gasket or a cracked head. Face reality now, or face it later. There was a thread here just a couple of months ago with someone insisting his problems could not be a cracked head. He was adamant it couldn't be a cracked head. The thread turned into a "how I rebuilt my engine and replaced my cracked head" thread. He did a great job on it, too, once he faced reality.
You can find out for sure by buying a test kit at your local parts store. Tell them you need a test kit for combustion gasses in your coolant.
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Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 4,734
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Year: 2015, 2012
Model: Grand Cherokee (WK2)
Engine: 3.6L
It could just be condensation. If your coolant level is normal and stays the same, I would just keep an eye on it for a while.
If it's the same way next summer, or after a long high-speed trip, I would start a diagnosis at that point.
If it's the same way next summer, or after a long high-speed trip, I would start a diagnosis at that point.
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Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 1,029
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From: Colorado
Year: 1991 2-Door
Model: Cherokee
Engine: 4.0 liter
When I bought mine the P. Owner took the jeep swimming at the lake they were camping at. Sand was all the way up into the glove box. I still bought it from him. For the first two years I had the same milky dip stick. After several oil changes with oil treatments before the changes, everything seems good.
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Joined: May 2012
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From: Lost in the wilds of Virginia
Year: 1998 Classic (I'll get it running soon....) and 02 Grand
Model: Cherokee (XJ)
Engine: 4.0
- Milky oil means there is water in there. That water is damaging your bearings, regardless of how it got there.
- If you have enough condensation to make milky oil, you have serious problems.
- Leaving that condition alone until next summer is likely going to mean an engine rebuild.
- Not all head gasket leaks result in a loss of coolant, and it doesn't take much to start damaging your bearings.
For the risk of the cost of an engine rebuild, getting an exhaust gas tester is cheap insurance.
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Joined: Jan 2013
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From: Colorado
Year: 1991 2-Door
Model: Cherokee
Engine: 4.0 liter
- Milky oil means there is water in there. That water is damaging your bearings, regardless of how it got there.
- If you have enough condensation to make milky oil, you have serious problems.
- Leaving that condition alone until next summer is likely going to mean an engine rebuild.
- Not all head gasket leaks result in a loss of coolant, and it doesn't take much to start damaging your bearings.
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Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 4,734
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Year: 2015, 2012
Model: Grand Cherokee (WK2)
Engine: 3.6L
As I interpreted your earlier post, there is a milky (residue) on the dipstick (above the oil line) and on the underside of the fill cap (but none apparently anywhere else).
If that is all there is, I still maintain that it is too early to start ripping into the engine.
You said the oil looks normal on changing it, and the coolant level remains steady. If the engine maintains normal temps and oil pressure, nothing really definitively points to a head gasket failure at this time.
If that is all there is, I still maintain that it is too early to start ripping into the engine.
You said the oil looks normal on changing it, and the coolant level remains steady. If the engine maintains normal temps and oil pressure, nothing really definitively points to a head gasket failure at this time.
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Joined: Apr 2013
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From: Dawson Springs, KY
Year: 1985
Model: Cherokee
Engine: 2.5L
I have a 85xj with the 2.5L and I get the same residue on the dipstick. The coolant levels have stayed the same for two years without loosing any and the oil looks good when changing it. I do have quite a bit of blow by due to worn rings, you can pull the tube from the inlet side of the valve cover that connects to the air cleaner and feel puffs of air against your hand even with the carb pulling through the pcv line.
If I connect a line directly to the carb without the pcv valve and plug the inlet connector the milky residue on the dip stick goes away because I am pulling a strong vacuum on the crank case which dries the condensation from the blow by.
If you are getting a lot of blow by it could be what is causing your problem. Blow by and short trips really compounds the problem as the moisture from the exhaust never gets cooked out of the crank case, and cold weather will compound it again causing worse condensation. Do check for exhaust gasses in your coolant, that shouldn't cost too much, but also check to see how much blow by you have. Could be you need rings, but that is less of an immediate concern than at cracked head or blown head gasket would be.
If I connect a line directly to the carb without the pcv valve and plug the inlet connector the milky residue on the dip stick goes away because I am pulling a strong vacuum on the crank case which dries the condensation from the blow by.
If you are getting a lot of blow by it could be what is causing your problem. Blow by and short trips really compounds the problem as the moisture from the exhaust never gets cooked out of the crank case, and cold weather will compound it again causing worse condensation. Do check for exhaust gasses in your coolant, that shouldn't cost too much, but also check to see how much blow by you have. Could be you need rings, but that is less of an immediate concern than at cracked head or blown head gasket would be.
The oil on the 4.0 that I returned yesterday didn't show signs of any issues on the dip stick or on the oil that I drained out of it after taking delivery. It was until I changed the oil I read about the cracked head syndrome and started looking in the oil fill hole. There was some soft sludge between 3 & 4. Looking at an angle towards the push rod on 4 I could see green droplets. I pulled the valve cover and saw some droplets further up on the head. I wiped the whole area clean and and see any crack. I put the cover back on and fired it up to move it.behind the garage. I got out and looked down the oil fill hole while it was running and low and behold I started to see a droplet of liquid form ever so slowly and it wasn't oil.
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Year: 2015, 2012
Model: Grand Cherokee (WK2)
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From: Florida
Year: 2000
Model: Cherokee(XJ)
Engine: Golen 4.6L
I have some milky stuff on the 4.0 engine oil dip stick. I've watched the coolant level etc, and haven't seen any loss of it. And no bubbles in the coolant in the radiator.
The dip stick has been like that for a couple months, and when I changed the oil, it looked normal.
The dip stick has been like that for a couple months, and when I changed the oil, it looked normal.
What brand and flavor of oil are you using?
I was running Mobil 1 when my head cracked. It turned a little lighter in color but never milky or frothy the way it would in the 1970s.
This thread is confusing. It looks like Steelybill (the OP) has a '94, for which a cracked head would be unusual. 51 Ashton is the one with the 2000 with an observed head crack, which is not unusual. Let's be sure to clarify which one we're talking about, lest we confuse the hell out of someone (me).


