Colourful Fluid On Ground

Colourful Fluid On Ground

Author
Discussion

MakaveliX

Original Poster:

645 posts

36 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
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 ?

Time4another

272 posts

10 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
Oil from your filter change

cliffords

1,823 posts

30 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
That is likely to be something spilled a few days ago in the dry , now visible as it has rained.

epom

12,416 posts

168 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
Unicorn wee ?

Acorn1

880 posts

27 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
Looks like petrol

Louis Balfour

27,682 posts

229 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
epom said:
Unicorn wee ?
Very good.

MakaveliX

Original Poster:

645 posts

36 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
Acorn1 said:
Looks like petrol
Think so as the economy slightly dropped this morning. I’ll check the hoses to the fuel filter over the weekend

E-bmw

9,971 posts

159 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
Time4another said:
Oil from your filter change
Or fuel from the fuel filter change even. wink

epom

12,416 posts

168 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
Louis Balfour said:
epom said:
Unicorn wee ?
Very good.
Only saying it from experience with two young girls and a slight oil leak on herself's car.

TwinKam

3,168 posts

102 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
MakaveliX said:
Acorn1 said:
Looks like petrol
Think so as the economy slightly dropped this morning. I’ll check the hoses to the fuel filter over the weekend
Don't wait until the weekend. Do it today.

MakaveliX

Original Poster:

645 posts

36 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
It’s a project car so will be sat on the drive until I check it at the weekend . Not the daily driver

4Q

3,478 posts

151 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
If that’s tarmac and you don’t do something about it it will start to break up fairly quickly

donkmeister

9,239 posts

107 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
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.

4Q

3,478 posts

151 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
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.

GreenV8S

30,479 posts

291 months

Wednesday 4th September
quotequote all
MakaveliX said:
I noticed this fluid infront of the car ( in front of where it had been parked, not underneath the car )
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.

MakaveliX

Original Poster:

645 posts

36 months

Thursday 5th September
quotequote all
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

MakaveliX

Original Poster:

645 posts

36 months

Thursday 12th September
quotequote all
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.

donkmeister

9,239 posts

107 months

Thursday 12th September
quotequote all
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.
Ah... I read the OP as saying he'd spilt fuel when doing the fuel filter rather than it being an ongoing leak.

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.

Krikkit

26,995 posts

188 months

Thursday 12th September
quotequote all
Get sheet(s) of cardboard under the car so you can find where it's dripping from

MakaveliX

Original Poster:

645 posts

36 months

Wednesday 25th September
quotequote all
Just an update.
The fluid was in-fact automatic transmission fluid, leaking out of a £10 plug " pilot bushing " which prevents ATF going to electrical components.
Job took about 1 hour and seems fine now.

Turns out it's a common cause of leaks on early Mercedes cars.