Colourful Fluid On Ground
Discussion
Car had been parked for a couple of days, this morning I took the car out, when I came back I noticed this fluid infront of the car ( in front of where it had been parked, not underneath the car )
I assume as I drove off something must have spilled.
Oil levels are fine, I am concerned it is fuel but it has no smell. Last job was a fuel filter change last Thursday.
It has no smell to it, any ideas ?
I assume as I drove off something must have spilled.
Oil levels are fine, I am concerned it is fuel but it has no smell. Last job was a fuel filter change last Thursday.
It has no smell to it, any ideas ?
4Q said:
If that’s tarmac and you don’t do something about it it will start to break up fairly quickly
Do you mean the tarmac will break up because of a tiny splash of fuel? You'd need a lot more than that to soften/wash the bitumen sufficiently that aggregate starts to get knocked out of the surface.
donkmeister said:
Do you mean the tarmac will break up because of a tiny splash of fuel?
You'd need a lot more than that to soften/wash the bitumen sufficiently that aggregate starts to get knocked out of the surface.
If it’s dripping fuel as suggested above it will dissolve the tarmac. You'd need a lot more than that to soften/wash the bitumen sufficiently that aggregate starts to get knocked out of the surface.
GreenV8S said:
Marks where you didn't park are unlikely to have come from the car. Park on a different spot and see if you get any further evidence of a leak.
Waited for the weather to dry, took the car out and no sign of leaks. Fuel filter is dry with no sign of fuel anywhere it shouldn't be.I think that some rain and fuel ( from when I did the fuel filter ) last week splashed out of the undertray as I drove off yesterday morning
When I came home yesterday all of the above rainbow had cleared up.
Edited by MakaveliX on Thursday 5th September 15:46
Today, a suspicious slightly white patch appeared under the car. The whole of the underside is dry, however the sump which holds the ATF appears to be quite greasy and potentially has a minor leak.
I will buy a dipstick, check the levels and take it from there.
Good chance its ATF fluid due to a worn gasket but I will have to investigate.
I will buy a dipstick, check the levels and take it from there.
Good chance its ATF fluid due to a worn gasket but I will have to investigate.
4Q said:
donkmeister said:
Do you mean the tarmac will break up because of a tiny splash of fuel?
You'd need a lot more than that to soften/wash the bitumen sufficiently that aggregate starts to get knocked out of the surface.
If it’s dripping fuel as suggested above it will dissolve the tarmac. You'd need a lot more than that to soften/wash the bitumen sufficiently that aggregate starts to get knocked out of the surface.
I know that I've never changed a fuel filter without spilling some petrol in the process, these days I use blue roll and a glass bowl to try and catch any but I've definitely spilt it on the ground before.
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