- Location
- Near Rochester NY
The best way to test the oil pressure guage and wiring harness is to turn on the ignition key and short the wire on the sensor to the engine block, while a helper is watching the guage. No need to disconnect the wire from the guage. You should be able to use a screwdriver. If the guage and wiring harness is good, the pressure guage will go to 0 PSI. If it doesn't go to zero, you most likely have a problem with the harness.
My 1990 XJ was leaking a quart of oil every 1000 miles, mostly out the rear main seal. From what I read here, I suspected excess pressure in the crank case. I replaced the CCV hoses with a set from NAPA. I did a search here and found the NAPA part numbers posted here. With the new hoses the leaks are completly stopped. The NAPA parts cost me less than half the dealer price and fit real nice.
It is the small diameter plastic tube that attaches to the rear of the valve cover that is supposed to relieve the pressure. I would bet that tube on your engine is completly blocked. Pull it off and try to blow through it. Another symptom is oil on the rear of the oil filter element. This happens because the small tube gets plugged and the pressure is relieved into the air box, through the large diameter hose in the front of the valve cover. This is supposed to supply filtered air into the crank case. Since this hose goes to the air box, there is not enough vacuum to relieve the pressure, and there are no baffels to keep the oil from going out the hose.
I recently bought a 1987 XJ that leaks a quart every tank, mostly through the rear main, like yours. I plan to replace these hoses after I finish installing the lift kit. I hope I fare as well as I did on the 1990.
If you have a NAPA up there, try the hose kit, before you replace the rear main. Or, see if the small one is blocked, at least. Could save you a lot of time and put off the rear main replacement. The hard plastic tubes are probably original, old and brittle. If they are not broken, they will likely break the next time you bump one.
MoFo
My 1990 XJ was leaking a quart of oil every 1000 miles, mostly out the rear main seal. From what I read here, I suspected excess pressure in the crank case. I replaced the CCV hoses with a set from NAPA. I did a search here and found the NAPA part numbers posted here. With the new hoses the leaks are completly stopped. The NAPA parts cost me less than half the dealer price and fit real nice.
It is the small diameter plastic tube that attaches to the rear of the valve cover that is supposed to relieve the pressure. I would bet that tube on your engine is completly blocked. Pull it off and try to blow through it. Another symptom is oil on the rear of the oil filter element. This happens because the small tube gets plugged and the pressure is relieved into the air box, through the large diameter hose in the front of the valve cover. This is supposed to supply filtered air into the crank case. Since this hose goes to the air box, there is not enough vacuum to relieve the pressure, and there are no baffels to keep the oil from going out the hose.
I recently bought a 1987 XJ that leaks a quart every tank, mostly through the rear main, like yours. I plan to replace these hoses after I finish installing the lift kit. I hope I fare as well as I did on the 1990.
If you have a NAPA up there, try the hose kit, before you replace the rear main. Or, see if the small one is blocked, at least. Could save you a lot of time and put off the rear main replacement. The hard plastic tubes are probably original, old and brittle. If they are not broken, they will likely break the next time you bump one.
MoFo