Hi everyone,
I really hope someone can help.
Long story short, I just picked up a 2013 Raptor with insanely high miles (244k) first owner had it until 2017 and drove it 42,500 miles a year. The second owner 14k a year. I pretty much bought it sight unseen (just some face time video) which really doesn’t help, it was more just for piece of mind it started and drove. After having it delivered I knew instantly it would need the shocks rebuilt and lower ball joints. Totally fine with that as it’s a used truck, and of corse I knew there would be some repairs. I knew it was due for an oil change so I figured it’s a warm day up here in NY so why not. Drained the oil and looked black, no light brown or milkshake looking oil. Same with the filter. When I went to put oil back in I noticed milkshake light brown/white oil on the oil cap. I then I started having a panic attack and cursing a up a storm praying it’s not blown head gasket. So I told myself maybe it’s just moisture from a bad o-ring on the oil cap or PCV valve. I also checked the radiator and overflow, and saw zero signs of oil in either. I took the truck out for a short drive today to run some errands, and figured I better check the oil to make sure it was a one off. Checked the dipstick and oil looks clean and new. I then took off the oil cap and it was covered in milkshake oil again, only this time looked a lot more covered then when I removed the cap yesterday. Is it possible the gasket is just starting to let go? Or is there another way coolant can be getting in and burning off? I don’t smell any sweet smell coming from the exhaust, or any real steam other then condensation from the 45-50f air at the moment. It’s not like the truck was cheap by any means and I really am dreading dumping thousands into it instantly. I really hope someone can help shed some light on this, or if just just normal for the 6.2? I read that moisture can get in and cause this from short trips. If that’s actually the case and not a head gasket, is there anything I can do to prevent moisture?
(Solved)
*Replaced PCV Valve*
Cause:
Moisture build up from short drives and cold weather, coupled with a worn out/bad PCV Valve
In the near future I will be adding a catch can.
I really hope someone can help.
Long story short, I just picked up a 2013 Raptor with insanely high miles (244k) first owner had it until 2017 and drove it 42,500 miles a year. The second owner 14k a year. I pretty much bought it sight unseen (just some face time video) which really doesn’t help, it was more just for piece of mind it started and drove. After having it delivered I knew instantly it would need the shocks rebuilt and lower ball joints. Totally fine with that as it’s a used truck, and of corse I knew there would be some repairs. I knew it was due for an oil change so I figured it’s a warm day up here in NY so why not. Drained the oil and looked black, no light brown or milkshake looking oil. Same with the filter. When I went to put oil back in I noticed milkshake light brown/white oil on the oil cap. I then I started having a panic attack and cursing a up a storm praying it’s not blown head gasket. So I told myself maybe it’s just moisture from a bad o-ring on the oil cap or PCV valve. I also checked the radiator and overflow, and saw zero signs of oil in either. I took the truck out for a short drive today to run some errands, and figured I better check the oil to make sure it was a one off. Checked the dipstick and oil looks clean and new. I then took off the oil cap and it was covered in milkshake oil again, only this time looked a lot more covered then when I removed the cap yesterday. Is it possible the gasket is just starting to let go? Or is there another way coolant can be getting in and burning off? I don’t smell any sweet smell coming from the exhaust, or any real steam other then condensation from the 45-50f air at the moment. It’s not like the truck was cheap by any means and I really am dreading dumping thousands into it instantly. I really hope someone can help shed some light on this, or if just just normal for the 6.2? I read that moisture can get in and cause this from short trips. If that’s actually the case and not a head gasket, is there anything I can do to prevent moisture?
(Solved)
*Replaced PCV Valve*
Cause:
Moisture build up from short drives and cold weather, coupled with a worn out/bad PCV Valve
In the near future I will be adding a catch can.
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