I realize that some may consider this picking a nit, but there is no
carburetor on your car. It is called a throttle body.
Ken
"eb7g" > wrote in message
news:U8Bnc.406489$Pk3.400929@pd7tw1no...
> Thanks for the replies!!
>
> I figured out what it was. It was actually engine oil that I was
smelling.
>
> You know the top of the Saturn motors, there is a release value of
some
> sort, right in front of the carburator? Well, I guess the accident
> impact pushed it completely out and I was smelling hot oil!!! I put
it
> back in, voila, no more smell.
>
> And JUST IN TIME TOO, I checked my engine oil, as a precaution. Yep,
> those 3-4 days of the motor not being a closed system had evaporated
(or
> I inhaled it all) almost all the oil and my car was overheating like
> mad. I dumped some more in and accidentally put too much (I am an
idiot
> I suppose) and I get some other problems now, but nothing major.
>
>
>
> richard hornsby wrote:
>
> >
> > First off, I can tell you that carbon monoxide is completely
odorless,
> > colorless, and tasteless. Exhaust gases contain CO, and you're
likely
> > smelling the non-CO components. Arguably, it is the CO that is
the most
> > dangerous component, however.
> >
> > Did the shop who fixed your car check to see if there was any
damage to
> > the engine or the exhaust system? Or did your insurance co only
allow
> > you to go to a "body shop"?
> >
> > It is _possible_ that your exhaust manifold is cracked and when
you turn
> > on the fan you're sucking those gases trapped under the hood into
the
> > cabin. I don't remember where the cabin air intake is located.
However,
> > IIRC a cracked exhaust manifold would exhibit many other issues
> > including a lot of noise. You're right tho - exhaust gases in the
cabin
> > can be an extremely dangerous situation. The part you can't see
and
> > smell is hurting you.
> >
> > Check for damage under the hood - intake manifold, fuel lines
(?!),
> > exhaust manifold, tailpipe and muffler assembly, etc. Look for
leaking
> > oil around the seals and gaskets. Better yet, take it to a shop
that
> > you're familiar with who will check it out for you a little or no
cost.
> > They will likely be able to tell you if any damage they find is
> > coincidental or a result of the accident.
> >
> > Depending on the severity of the impact with the 4Runner, you may
also
> > want to inspect or have your seatbelts inspected for stress
damage.
> >
> > HTH
> > -rj
> > 98SL2
> >
> > eb7g wrote:
> >
> >> HI there
> >>
> >> I have a '93 Saturn SL2. Nice car. I recently rear ended someone
who
> >> cut me off (it looks like's he's the liable one). He was driving
a
> >> Toyota 4Runner and the left front of my car went right under his.
His
> >> truck had no damage, but my front bumper and the hood need to be
> >> replaced, as well as some frame repair.
> >>
> >> Now, here is the weird part. Since the accident, whenever I turn
on
> >> the fan, the driver cabin gets flooded with either a rich gas
smell or
> >> a rich carbon monoxide smell. It's making me quite sick and is a
> >> hazard for sure.
> >>
> >> But my insurance adjuster says that because he can't see how this
> >> corelates to the accident, he can't get involved in this, unless
> >> proven otherwise. This is seems strange to me too as I also don't
see
> >> any leakage or etc.. in the engine.
> >>
> >> I thought I was smelling the other cars around me through the
damaged
> >> hood, but nope, the smell comes when I"m parked, or at the stop
light
> >> with no one in front of me.
> >>
> >> Does anyone have any ideas about what's going on?
> >>
>
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