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Old 11-26-2006, 02:07 AM   #1
ocbaud
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water out my exhaust

ok, i have a question/possible problem.

after about 1 minute of running, the exhaust starts spitting out quite a bit of water, enough to leave a little puddle under the pipes.

after about 10 minutes it no longer emits water though.

its not coolant, or fuel, just dirty water(dirty from the carbon in the exhaust pipes)

i know some water is normal, but this just seems like its quite a bit more than the "normal"

like i said, i know its water, and not coolant or fuel. i dont have a head gasket leak or anything, its just water...
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Old 11-26-2006, 01:22 PM   #2
bmartin9122
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Re: water out my exhaust

It sounds like your engine is tuned properly and catalytic converters are working well. The result of burning hydrocarbons (aka - dead dinosaurs, gasoline) using oxygen extracted from the ambient air is nitrogen (and a lot of it), carbon dioxoide, heat, and water.

Of course, this assumes complete (0% wasted fuel) combustion without any contaminants in the fuel like sulfur. Internal combustion engines fall far short of this utopian ideal, but they are improving all the time.

As far as your truck is concerned, I wouldn't be a bit concerned about significant water escaping the tailpipe when you first start up the engine. Your exhaust system has not warmed up enough to keep the combustion water vaporized, and it is condensating inside the exhaust pipe until everything warms up sufficiently. This will be aggravated when the outside temp drops.

This is the primary reason modern exhaust systems are made from stainless steel, aluminized steel, etc. Corrosion from the inside is a big problem.
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--Ramsey RE8000 winch
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Last edited by bmartin9122; 11-27-2006 at 01:07 PM.
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Old 11-26-2006, 01:25 PM   #3
ocbaud
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Re: water out my exhaust

Quote:
Originally Posted by bmartin9122 View Post
It sounds like your engine is tuned properly and catalytic converters are working well. The result of buring hydrocarbons (aka - dead dinosaurs, gasoline) using oxygen extracted from the ambient air is nitrogen (and a lot of it), carbon dioxoide, heat, and water.

Of course, this assumes complete (0% wasted fuel) combustion without any contaminants in the fuel like sulfur. Internal combustion engines fall far short of this utopian ideal, but they are improving all the time.

As far as your truck is concerned, I wouldn't be a bit concerned about significant water escaping the tailpipe when you first start up the engine. Your exhaust system has not warmed up enough to keep the combustion water vaporized, and it is condensating inside the exhaust pipe until everything warms up sufficiently. This will be aggravated when the outside temp drops.

This is the primary reason exhaust systems are made from stainless steel, aluminized steel, etc. Corrosion from the inside is a big problem.
i dont have any cats on it

i know water out the pipes is normal, but it just seems like a lot of it.
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Old 11-26-2006, 03:10 PM   #4
piecesparts
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Re: water out my exhaust

Condensation is a miracle of nature. Add moisture laden air and then heat it up and then cool it again the water will collect and run out of your exhaust. Winter is coming---Dude.
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Old 11-26-2006, 05:48 PM   #5
bmartin9122
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Re: water out my exhaust

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Originally Posted by ocbaud View Post
i dont have any cats on it

i know water out the pipes is normal, but it just seems like a lot of it.
The cats just help extract any remaining fuel vapors.

The increase in water at your truck's tailpipe is most likely due to the seasonal drop in ambient air temperature. No worries!
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79 GMC Sierra Grande K15
--PPG paint code 62608 Sunburst Orange Metallic (WA802K)
--Gentex auto-dimming rearview mirror model K31
--Carriage Works billet grille model 40071
--Go Industries 2.5" tubular stainless headache rack
--Sylvania Silverstar sealed headlights model H6024ST
--Texas Saddlebags center console model 101
--Brown's Welding class IV V-5 pipe bumper
--Ramsey RE8000 winch
--33" tires
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Old 11-26-2006, 07:36 PM   #6
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Re: water out my exhaust

If it continues on a warm day or there is evidence of steam out of your pipes, along with a sweet smell, then there would be concern about a leak.
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Old 11-26-2006, 09:50 PM   #7
magnethead
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Re: water out my exhaust

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Originally Posted by piecesparts View Post
Condensation is a miracle of nature. Add moisture laden air and then heat it up and then cool it again the water will collect and run out of your exhaust. Winter is coming---Dude.
Ditto that.

On cold mornings, sometimes i'll get a cloud out of both pipes (true duals with H pipe) aong with water. Just condensation is all it is.
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Old 11-26-2006, 10:04 PM   #8
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Re: water out my exhaust

I HATE winter. Ever since I used to have to push snow for a living. Frostie and his winter friends are not on my list of goodies.
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Old 11-26-2006, 10:23 PM   #9
j hannah
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Re: water out my exhaust

I live about 80 mi. east of you,near Henryetta. all my cars do the same thing. if it does it after a 30 min. warm up, I might get concerned. It's just our humid weather.Just be sure you warm it up good. Short trips wil rot your pipes and muffler out quick.
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Old 11-26-2006, 11:57 PM   #10
powerdriver 1958
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Re: water out my exhaust

its normal
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Old 11-27-2006, 02:14 AM   #11
1933 Gasser
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Re: water out my exhaust

Quote:
Originally Posted by bmartin9122 View Post
This is the primary reason modern exhaust systems are made from stainless steel, aluminized steel, etc. Corrosion from the inside is a big problem.
My mom's '74 Gremlin was never driven more than a few miles, to Church or the grocery store. When she got rid of it, the exhaust system was rusted off and it smoked horribly. It only had 14,000 miles on it. It never really got warmed up, and suffered the consequences.
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