Hello,
I am French, and I hope you will understand the translation and help me.
I have a problem with my Isuzu NPR 4.8L 4HE1-XN 2003 engine.
Here’s the situation:
The truck was running perfectly, starting well and having power. However, there was overpressure in the cooling system, and exhaust gases were escaping through the expansion tank.
Diagnosis: blown head gasket.
I had the cylinder head checked and resurfaced (by 0.3mm) and installed a new Chinese head gasket (1.8mm inside and on the edges) to prevent the gears from getting blocked. (The Isuzu head gasket is 1.8mm inside but 1.5mm on the edges, which causes blockage). My original head gasket was an Isuzu 1.8mm.
I installed the new gasket and the resurfaced head, aligned the white mark on the camshaft with the TDC mark on the crankshaft, and torqued the lifters correctly.
When I tried turning the engine by hand, it was blocked! I forced it a little (thinking it was the engine’s compression), and then "KLAC", the crankshaft freed up but got stuck again a little further.
It turns out the white mark on the camshaft was incorrect, and I should have used the "B" mark instead. When I torqued the lifters, a valve crushed piston 1 or 4.
I then properly aligned the camshaft and reassembled everything.
When I started the engine, it ran with some difficulty. It ran almost correctly but emitted a bit of white/blue smoke. However, as soon as the automatic choke stopped, the engine ran very poorly, shook violently, and emitted a huge amount of white/blue smoke, making it impossible to drive. The smoke burns my eyes and throat.
I disassembled everything to check if I had broken a valve or punctured a piston, but everything looked perfect, no visible damage.
I then replaced the valve stem seals and lapped the valves.
I reassembled everything but had exactly the same smoke issue.
I disassembled again to check for cracks or any other damage, but everything looked perfect.
I reassembled everything (new Chinese gasket, new bolts, etc.) and replaced the turbo (thinking I might have damaged it by removing the hoses when taking off the cylinder head).
Before installing the new turbo, I started the engine without the turbo and without coolant for better visibility. The result:
I replaced the fuel, fuel filter, and water separator—everything is OK.
I reinstalled the turbo and everything else.
I started the engine, and the same problem persisted!
I disassembled everything again and installed a brand-new cylinder head with my old valves and components (everything was checked and confirmed OK).
I used a new Isuzu 1.8mm head gasket, new bolts, and reassembled everything.
STILL THE SAME PROBLEM! I'M GOING CRAZY!
So, I checked the fuel injection pump timing, and it was set at 6 degrees BTDC. Is this normal?
In the workshop manual, the injection pump for the 4HE1-TC (which is similar to my 4HE1-XN) should be set at 8 degrees BTDC.
In online videos, 9 times out of 10, it is 8 degrees BTDC for the 4HE1, sometimes 7 or 9 degrees.
I went to an ISUZU garage, but they don’t know—my truck is too old, and they refused to help me.
Is it normal that my timing is set at 6 degrees BTDC?
Could the "KLAC" from the incorrect camshaft timing have shifted a gear tooth? That seems impossible to me…
Would it be possible to adjust it to 8 degrees? That seems impossible because moving one tooth on the injection pump gear would shift it too far, by 10 or 11 degrees, since the teeth are too wide.
Or maybe the timing slipped on the crankshaft gear (which has finer teeth), but in that case, wouldn’t I be unable to properly time the camshaft?
I managed, by removing the intake manifold, to adjust the ignition timing by pivoting the pump toward the engine (moving it outward was impossible because the injector pipes were too tight), but the problem remains the same.
Maybe the "KLAC" cracked the engine block or broke something else, causing low compression and poor combustion. But across all four cylinders—is that even possible?
I'm waiting to receive a compression tester to check.
Do you have any other ideas? Camshaft position sensor? Another sensor? Where are they located? I haven’t found anything.
I have videos of the startup and smoke if needed. I can send them to you on WhatsApp.
Thank you.
I am French, and I hope you will understand the translation and help me.
I have a problem with my Isuzu NPR 4.8L 4HE1-XN 2003 engine.
Here’s the situation:
The truck was running perfectly, starting well and having power. However, there was overpressure in the cooling system, and exhaust gases were escaping through the expansion tank.
Diagnosis: blown head gasket.
I had the cylinder head checked and resurfaced (by 0.3mm) and installed a new Chinese head gasket (1.8mm inside and on the edges) to prevent the gears from getting blocked. (The Isuzu head gasket is 1.8mm inside but 1.5mm on the edges, which causes blockage). My original head gasket was an Isuzu 1.8mm.
I installed the new gasket and the resurfaced head, aligned the white mark on the camshaft with the TDC mark on the crankshaft, and torqued the lifters correctly.
When I tried turning the engine by hand, it was blocked! I forced it a little (thinking it was the engine’s compression), and then "KLAC", the crankshaft freed up but got stuck again a little further.
It turns out the white mark on the camshaft was incorrect, and I should have used the "B" mark instead. When I torqued the lifters, a valve crushed piston 1 or 4.
I then properly aligned the camshaft and reassembled everything.
When I started the engine, it ran with some difficulty. It ran almost correctly but emitted a bit of white/blue smoke. However, as soon as the automatic choke stopped, the engine ran very poorly, shook violently, and emitted a huge amount of white/blue smoke, making it impossible to drive. The smoke burns my eyes and throat.
I disassembled everything to check if I had broken a valve or punctured a piston, but everything looked perfect, no visible damage.
I then replaced the valve stem seals and lapped the valves.
I reassembled everything but had exactly the same smoke issue.
I disassembled again to check for cracks or any other damage, but everything looked perfect.
I reassembled everything (new Chinese gasket, new bolts, etc.) and replaced the turbo (thinking I might have damaged it by removing the hoses when taking off the cylinder head).
Before installing the new turbo, I started the engine without the turbo and without coolant for better visibility. The result:
- Smoke comes out of all 4 combustion chambers.
- The smoke is mainly white.
- Unburned diesel is dripping from the exhaust ports.
I replaced the fuel, fuel filter, and water separator—everything is OK.
I reinstalled the turbo and everything else.
I started the engine, and the same problem persisted!
I disassembled everything again and installed a brand-new cylinder head with my old valves and components (everything was checked and confirmed OK).
I used a new Isuzu 1.8mm head gasket, new bolts, and reassembled everything.
STILL THE SAME PROBLEM! I'M GOING CRAZY!
So, I checked the fuel injection pump timing, and it was set at 6 degrees BTDC. Is this normal?
In the workshop manual, the injection pump for the 4HE1-TC (which is similar to my 4HE1-XN) should be set at 8 degrees BTDC.
In online videos, 9 times out of 10, it is 8 degrees BTDC for the 4HE1, sometimes 7 or 9 degrees.
I went to an ISUZU garage, but they don’t know—my truck is too old, and they refused to help me.
Is it normal that my timing is set at 6 degrees BTDC?
Could the "KLAC" from the incorrect camshaft timing have shifted a gear tooth? That seems impossible to me…
Would it be possible to adjust it to 8 degrees? That seems impossible because moving one tooth on the injection pump gear would shift it too far, by 10 or 11 degrees, since the teeth are too wide.
Or maybe the timing slipped on the crankshaft gear (which has finer teeth), but in that case, wouldn’t I be unable to properly time the camshaft?
I managed, by removing the intake manifold, to adjust the ignition timing by pivoting the pump toward the engine (moving it outward was impossible because the injector pipes were too tight), but the problem remains the same.
Maybe the "KLAC" cracked the engine block or broke something else, causing low compression and poor combustion. But across all four cylinders—is that even possible?
I'm waiting to receive a compression tester to check.
Do you have any other ideas? Camshaft position sensor? Another sensor? Where are they located? I haven’t found anything.
I have videos of the startup and smoke if needed. I can send them to you on WhatsApp.
Thank you.
