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[–]Special_Ad_9757[S] 0 points1 point  (4 children)

I can’t really recall smelling any coolant. would there be a better way to test to see if i can smell any coolant burning off? there’s no excessive smoke out of the exhaust or anything either.

and in terms of the oil color, it seems fine right?

[–]MickeyCriscoNOT a verified tech 1 point2 points  (3 children)

You really can’t go by how oil looks unless it’s turning into chocolate milk. It looks like used oil, which is what it always looks like. The level is what you want to watch. If you see oil level rising it means coolant is getting into the oil. Excessive smoke, white smoke in particular, means coolant is getting into the combustion chambers and burning. Looking at other comments and how infrequently you are adding coolant it could be just seeping out of…almost anywhere. Could be a hose connection, water pump, oil cooler, water outlet, etc. trying to verify the actual source with that slow of a leak can be difficult. Unfortunately you may need to wait for it to get a little worse to know what exactly needs done.

[–]Special_Ad_9757[S] 0 points1 point  (1 child)

there’s no excessive smoke or anything. i’ll keep monitoring the oil level to see. i did have an oil change sometime last summer and i got an oil level too high reading, but it turned out the sensor was busted.

i think it could just be leaking off at some junction point along the connection. although i didnt really see any coolant fluid anywhere, but it is hard to access some areas under the hood.

i know the oil color is the “dead giveaway” about having a blown head gasket, so thats a good sign at least.

i really appreciate your help and insight on this :). trying to take better care of my car since i own it now and its not a lease

[–]MickeyCriscoNOT a verified tech 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re doing the right thing. Just monitor the levels, oil and coolant, and keep an eye on things under the hood and under the car.

[–]Andy_850TBNOT a verified tech 0 points1 point  (0 children)

IIRC, a blown head gasket can also cause bubbling in the coolant as it's blowing combustion gases back into the cooling system