i have a 2002 lincoln navigator an when i put water in the resevru for cooling it leck out with out the truck running . were can this water come from
I have a 2000 lincoln navigator and there is a pipe like a drain pipe coming from water pump and connects to back of water pump does any one know what that pipe is called
If you have water on your spark plugs you have a serious problem. That is coolant you see and not water. You have a blown head gasket or cracked head. This engine will self destruct if you continue to drive it. Have this repaired ASAP and stop driving it until you do.
According to the 2001 Lincoln Navigator Owner Guide : It came from the factory with a 50 / 50 mix of distilled water and GREEN color antifreeze ( meeting Ford specification ESE-M97B44-A )
No spark plugs have nothing to do with water in your cylinders. I would guess a bad head gasket, worped head or cracked in the water jacket might be a closer bet. Hope this helps.
Depends on the type of flooding. Hopefully the gas flooded and not the water flooded. If it's flooded by gas try starting it with throttle wide open. If it doesn't work after a while, remove spark plugs and crank engine over for few seconds (remember to watch out for the spark) Install new spark plugs. If the engine is flooded from water, you will have to remove the spark plugs and crank on it for a while till all water comes out. *I have personal experience here* Install spark plugs and attempt to start, if not remove plugs and keep cranking. It may fire for a second or two. Keep removing spark plugs to dry them off and crank some more. Keep this up back and forth for a while, or till engine fires up.
You have either A blown head gasket, A cracked head or a cracked block, alowing water from your cooling system to enter the chamber. this will result in water also finding its way into the sump ruining the oil . stop the motor and dont run it till it is fixed. The water is coming out of the hole where the spark plugs screw in ? - Then water has gotten into the engine or is getting into the engine while driving in the rain or washing, it is unlikely that the water is actually coming out of the spark plugs themselves.
water could have gotten into the spark plug holes. water + spark= no good. Only a few spark plugs could be firing, take them out, and check for water.
PROBABLY SHORTING OUT THE SPARK PLUGS AND/OR SPARK PLUG WIRES. HAPPENED TOO ME SEVERAL TIMES. DRY THE DISTRIBUTOR CAP, SPARK PLUG WIRES AND CHECK IF THERE IS WATER IN THE SPARK PLUG CAVITIES.
The only time I have ever had water on my plugs in ANY motor is because of water in the cylinder.Check your oil for water and pray you don't have a bad head gasket.been there done that.
Water around the outsides of the spark plug may keep the car from running due to poor spark plug wires, but the engine should still turn over.
Kinda vague huh? from the first impression it sounds like you blew a coolant hose and the smoke you saw was steam from the coolant hitting the manifold. But if you had to remove the spark plugs to see the water then you have blown a head gasket.