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2001 V70 2.4T Oil pooling in the wells around ignition coils, Permatex 51813 cam sealer Topic is solved

Help, Advice, Owners' Discussion and DIY Tutorials on Volvo's stylish, distinctive P2 platform cars sold as model years 2001-2007 (North American market year designations).

2001 - 2007 V70
2001 - 2004 V70 XC (Cross Country)
2004 - 2007 XC70 (Cross Country)
2001 - 2009 S60
2003 - 2007 S60 R
2004 - 2007 V70 R

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prwood
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2001 V70 2.4T Oil pooling in the wells around ignition coils, Permatex 51813 cam sealer

Post by prwood »

Oil is pooling in the wells around the ignition coils on my 2001 V70 2.4T.

First off, I found this thread from a few years back which gave me a few things to go on:

viewtopic.php?t=38014

In terms of possible causes, I can confirm that I replaced the complete PCV system on 8/5/2017, replaced the oil filler cap on 8/23/2017, replaced the front and rear camshaft oil seals on 10/29/2017, and at that time also retightened the crankshaft vent hose on top of the cam cover.

My next guess is that maybe it's a leak from around one or more screws on the cam cover, and maybe I should retorque those and possibly put some thread sealer on them. Or possibly the replacement cap I installed on 8/5 was sub-par (it was a Duralast part) and should try replacing that.

Any other ideas?
Cars I've owned:
- 2015 to current: 2001 Volvo V70 2.4T; 2004 Honda Odyssey
- 2007 to 2015: 2002 Subaru Legacy L Wagon
- 2003 to 2016: 2001 Toyota Corolla LE
- 1999 to 2003: 1994 Toyota Camry LE

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abscate
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Post by abscate »

Yep - don't aftermarket parts suck?? You need a good Volvo oil filler cap gasket to keep that engine top dry.
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prwood
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Post by prwood »

When your oil filler cap is leaking, does the oil spray out in all directions from under the cap, or is it more or less aimed at one area? Just wondering why the entire engine compartment wouldn't be covered with oil if this is indeed what's happening.
Cars I've owned:
- 2015 to current: 2001 Volvo V70 2.4T; 2004 Honda Odyssey
- 2007 to 2015: 2002 Subaru Legacy L Wagon
- 2003 to 2016: 2001 Toyota Corolla LE
- 1999 to 2003: 1994 Toyota Camry LE

precopster
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Post by precopster »

I've used the 50c (when on special I buy 30 or 40) FCP oil filler cap gaskets on all my Volvos for 8 years and never had an issue if I replace at each oil change.

They do seep quite a bit when old and hard though, especially when I've purchased a new to me car or serviced a customer's one for the first time.

Do you have any PCV positive pressure ?
Current cars VW Transporter 2.5TDI, 2010 XC90 D5 R Design

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prwood
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Post by prwood »

I haven't tested for positive crankcase pressure since I replaced the PCV system earlier this year. I'm not getting the smoking oil dipstick symptom, but I haven't done the rubber glove test on the oil filler. I can do that and see how it turns out.

I did run out to the Volvo dealer today and pick up one of their oil filler caps (with gasket). The first thing I noticed is that the gasket on this cap was about twice as thick as the one in the Duralast cap, and is also made of a completely different material. The Duralast gasket was solid black in color, flexible and easily moved around underneath the tabs in the cap, but unyielding to the touch. The Volvo gasket was grey in color, yielding to the touch - almost like crafting foam or foam rubber, and didn't move much underneath the tabs in the cap.

I put the new cap on, but haven't cleaned up the oil yet. I'll do that and then see if it comes back.
Cars I've owned:
- 2015 to current: 2001 Volvo V70 2.4T; 2004 Honda Odyssey
- 2007 to 2015: 2002 Subaru Legacy L Wagon
- 2003 to 2016: 2001 Toyota Corolla LE
- 1999 to 2003: 1994 Toyota Camry LE

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June
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Post by June »

prwood wrote: 08 Nov 2017, 15:53 I haven't tested for positive crankcase pressure since I replaced the PCV system earlier this year. I'm not getting the smoking oil dipstick symptom, but I haven't done the rubber glove test on the oil filler. I can do that and see how it turns out.

I did run out to the Volvo dealer today and pick up one of their oil filler caps (with gasket). The first thing I noticed is that the gasket on this cap was about twice as thick as the one in the Duralast cap, and is also made of a completely different material. The Duralast gasket was solid black in color, flexible and easily moved around underneath the tabs in the cap, but unyielding to the touch. The Volvo gasket was grey in color, yielding to the touch - almost like crafting foam or foam rubber, and didn't move much underneath the tabs in the cap.

I put the new cap on, but haven't cleaned up the oil yet. I'll do that and then see if it comes back.
I'm not sure what the whole cap cost, but I replaced the oil cap gasket this year on my S80 and my dealership sold me just the gasket for the cap for $5.00. To my knowledge no oil leaked out, but I noticed the gasket was cracking all the way around. I can't complain as the original from 2004 was still in place. June
My Volvo cars owned
1989 740 GLT ordered
1994 850 4door standard shift ordered
1996 960 ordered
1998 S90 ordered totalled after 3 weeks
1998 V70 GT dealer stock car
2002 S80 T6 ordered totalled
2004 S80 T6 dealer stock car and current car owned

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prwood
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Post by prwood »

I did the rubber glove test last night at the oil filler neck, and it was sucked in nice and tight.

I cleaned all of the oil off of the valve cover and plan to do some heavy driving today to see if the oil comes back.
Cars I've owned:
- 2015 to current: 2001 Volvo V70 2.4T; 2004 Honda Odyssey
- 2007 to 2015: 2002 Subaru Legacy L Wagon
- 2003 to 2016: 2001 Toyota Corolla LE
- 1999 to 2003: 1994 Toyota Camry LE

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prwood
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Post by prwood »

After cleaning the oil off and going for a long drive, the oil has come back.

:-(
Cars I've owned:
- 2015 to current: 2001 Volvo V70 2.4T; 2004 Honda Odyssey
- 2007 to 2015: 2002 Subaru Legacy L Wagon
- 2003 to 2016: 2001 Toyota Corolla LE
- 1999 to 2003: 1994 Toyota Camry LE

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Post by Rattnalle »

Clean it off again and go for a short drive. Stop and see where it is before there's a lot of it.

Perhaps just let the car idle while you watch the engine even. A helper could rev it a bit for you. Oil pressure will be the same regardless of actual enginge load.

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prwood
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Post by prwood »

I can give it another try tonight and just drive around the neighborhood until the engine comes up to operating temp, then idle for a while and examine the engine.

Just for reference, here is a photo of the cylinder head taken a while back before I had cleaned up the oil. Since then I cleaned up the oil, and after my long drive there is now oil back in most of the same spots, although not as much. Most of the oil currently is concentrated in the wells indicated by arrows.
IMG_1649.JPG
Cars I've owned:
- 2015 to current: 2001 Volvo V70 2.4T; 2004 Honda Odyssey
- 2007 to 2015: 2002 Subaru Legacy L Wagon
- 2003 to 2016: 2001 Toyota Corolla LE
- 1999 to 2003: 1994 Toyota Camry LE

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