07-19-2017, 08:47 PM
Never lend your tools, never lend your tools, never lend your tools.
Well the neighbor who is super nice to me and the little one asked to borrow the pressure washer. I said OK. Neighbor tried to use the 25 degree nozzle with the soap dispensing function. Machine didn't run right afterwards. It was running irregularly and puffing out white smoke. I checked the engine oil and it was super full. I poured out the engine oil and it looked sort of watery / milky. I refilled with fresh oil and it ran fine.
I got to thinking that maybe the use of the wrong nozzle pushed water back into the engine, and that's why the oil was so full and looked odd. This sounds mechanically improbable, though.
I looked through the little viewing port for the pump oil and it looks fine, right on the red dot. Should I change out this oil because of this mishap?
After I put fresh oil in it--and gave the guy some more instructions--the machine ran just fine for him for the next few hours, and I used it the next day and it worked fine for me. It's a Ridgid 3000 psi.
Thank you for any and all suggestions. And yes, the rule about never lend out your tools is the one I really should have followed.
Well the neighbor who is super nice to me and the little one asked to borrow the pressure washer. I said OK. Neighbor tried to use the 25 degree nozzle with the soap dispensing function. Machine didn't run right afterwards. It was running irregularly and puffing out white smoke. I checked the engine oil and it was super full. I poured out the engine oil and it looked sort of watery / milky. I refilled with fresh oil and it ran fine.
I got to thinking that maybe the use of the wrong nozzle pushed water back into the engine, and that's why the oil was so full and looked odd. This sounds mechanically improbable, though.
I looked through the little viewing port for the pump oil and it looks fine, right on the red dot. Should I change out this oil because of this mishap?
After I put fresh oil in it--and gave the guy some more instructions--the machine ran just fine for him for the next few hours, and I used it the next day and it worked fine for me. It's a Ridgid 3000 psi.
Thank you for any and all suggestions. And yes, the rule about never lend out your tools is the one I really should have followed.