Hi there,
Dispite having the master seal (between the transmisison and the engine block) replaced, and another seal on the engine block itself replaced, I continue to have an oil leak in this car. Does anyone have a suggestion, or is this leak typical of a 1994 850?
Your time and suggestions are appreciated.
Regards, Jared Purdy
Oil leak in 1994 850
-
Ozark Lee
- MVS Moderator
- Posts: 14798
- Joined: 7 September 2006
- Year and Model: Many Volvos
- Location: USA Midwest
- Has thanked: 4 times
- Been thanked: 75 times
Hi Jared,
Is your car a turbo or is it normally aspirated?
Can you tell the general area where the leak is coming from?
Leaks are fairly common but they are certainly repairable. I have a '94 and it doesn't leak a drop.
Fill us in with a little more information and we will do our best to help you out.
...Lee
Is your car a turbo or is it normally aspirated?
Can you tell the general area where the leak is coming from?
Leaks are fairly common but they are certainly repairable. I have a '94 and it doesn't leak a drop.
Fill us in with a little more information and we will do our best to help you out.
...Lee
'94 850 N/A 5 speed
'96 Platinum Edition Turbo
Previous:
1999 V70XC - Nautic Blue - Totaled while parked.
1999 V70XC - RIP - Wrecked Parts Car.
1998 S70 T5
1996 850 N/A
1989 740 GLT
1986 740 GLT
1972 142 Grand Luxe
'96 Platinum Edition Turbo
Previous:
1999 V70XC - Nautic Blue - Totaled while parked.
1999 V70XC - RIP - Wrecked Parts Car.
1998 S70 T5
1996 850 N/A
1989 740 GLT
1986 740 GLT
1972 142 Grand Luxe
-
oldredwheels
- Posts: 24
- Joined: 2 January 2007
- Year and Model: V70 SE 2000
- Location: Woodstock MD
Hi Jared,
I have had similar frustrations with oil drips on the rear main seal side and found an interesting thing. The curved inlet tube into the throttle body was tilted back and down towards the PCV connection so that it was lower then centerline. It turned out that it was dripping the collected over mist oil down onto the rear side of the engine and tranny connections. The flame trap assembly was clearly dripping oil.
End result I made sure it was centerlined and the hose clamp into the throttle body was tight. The oil stopped dripping and the area under the car no longer shows evidence of dripping. Maybe I'm crazy but it proved a logical easy first fix.
oldredwheels na '94 855 155k
I have had similar frustrations with oil drips on the rear main seal side and found an interesting thing. The curved inlet tube into the throttle body was tilted back and down towards the PCV connection so that it was lower then centerline. It turned out that it was dripping the collected over mist oil down onto the rear side of the engine and tranny connections. The flame trap assembly was clearly dripping oil.
End result I made sure it was centerlined and the hose clamp into the throttle body was tight. The oil stopped dripping and the area under the car no longer shows evidence of dripping. Maybe I'm crazy but it proved a logical easy first fix.
oldredwheels na '94 855 155k
Thanks very much for the replies. I have no idea what the flame trap is though I have told my mechanic about it and they are definately going to look into it.
The first time we took the car into be fixed, they replaced the rear main seal, suggesting that it was old and dried out. The leak did not stop, so we took it back in and they noticed that oil seemed to be leaking from somewhere a little higher up on the engine and figured that with the new seal, the oil was looking for an escape route and found one in a gasket on the engine block, so that was replaced. We have now spent around $1700 trying to fix this problem and it still leaks. We are none to pleased.
The next time something major like this happens I will be taking the car to an authorized volvo mechanic as they will likely know exactly what the problem is.
Thanks for the info though, and I have told the mechanic to look at this site and even forwarded the replies to him.
Regards, Jared.
The first time we took the car into be fixed, they replaced the rear main seal, suggesting that it was old and dried out. The leak did not stop, so we took it back in and they noticed that oil seemed to be leaking from somewhere a little higher up on the engine and figured that with the new seal, the oil was looking for an escape route and found one in a gasket on the engine block, so that was replaced. We have now spent around $1700 trying to fix this problem and it still leaks. We are none to pleased.
The next time something major like this happens I will be taking the car to an authorized volvo mechanic as they will likely know exactly what the problem is.
Thanks for the info though, and I have told the mechanic to look at this site and even forwarded the replies to him.
Regards, Jared.
-
covlad1987
- Posts: 12
- Joined: 27 March 2007
- Year and Model:
- Location:
hi lift the dip stick when the engine running if there is a mist you might need to change it,the flame trap is number 13 on the pic nr the air filter houseing hope this helps
-
greasefingerss
- Posts: 208
- Joined: 25 January 2007
- Year and Model: 850 wagon 1994
- Location: Northern VA, USA
Look at the diagram listed in the link below (especially the area with an oval drawn around it). That is the flame trap. The elbow (they call it a nipple) rotates 45 degrees to remove it from the intake. Remove the throttle-body plastic intake elbow tube (the large 4 inch diameter thing) while you are at it and clean the throttle plate and any thing you can get your fingers on. The flame trap can be soaked in a small container of gas for cleaning or blast it with brake cleaner. I drilled my flame trap out a bit (enlarged all those little holes, which you can not see from the diagram)
http://www.fcpgroton.com/volvo850oiltrap.htm
http://www.fcpgroton.com/volvo850oiltrap.htm
Current Vehicles
1994 Volvo wagon(855) na 161,000 miles with AT
2003 Toyota Camry
1994 Jeep GC 202,000 miles
2003 Toy 4Runner
1994 Volvo wagon(855) na 161,000 miles with AT
2003 Toyota Camry
1994 Jeep GC 202,000 miles
2003 Toy 4Runner
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post






