Glad to help out, Good Luck!!!
No
I have a 1993 Dodge Stealth that was running fine then with 5 minutes engine oil blew out under neath the car. their is no oil in the radiator but the car would not start. what happened. If a head gasket blew would n't the oil look milkie color.
after the antifreeze is gone the car will have trouble starting due to the lake of antifreeze witch is needed to help it cool down ur car is still over heated your car wont start because you probally blew a head gasket and (possibly warped the head) have water and oil mixing
No, the word 'blew' is NOT a noun.The word 'blew' is the past tense of the verb to blow.Example: The wind blew out the candles.The word 'blow' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'blow' is a common noun; a general word for a hard hit to the body; a general word for a sudden shock or disappointment; a general word for an instance of forcing air through something; a general word for a very strong wind; a word for any blow of any kind.
the sun rose and the wind blue
Check the Heater Core? Did it smell like oil or antifreeze. My Heater Core went, started blowing out smoke from the vent. Most Likely the Problem. "smoke" poured into my 1991 when the ac blew out all the freon and froze up the outside temp gage.
it blew up
No start No compression Seized?
I used this filter on a 2000 Honda Accord with a V6. It fits many vehicles, but maybe not yours.
Not sure I understand. At this point everything that happened is mute. You now have rebuilt your engine and tried to start it. It didn't work so you checked and the 80 amp. fuse was blown. You went to start again and the check engine light is on but as you cranked the engine the distributor blew? If so explain blew? 80 amp Fuse still OK? Was it the distributor fuse that blew?
It started when my bum blew up!
No, Big Ben is still standing.
If replacing the main fuse does not make the repair, it is likely another fuse is also blown. Sometimes fuses will blow all along a circuit.
Havanna Harbor
Havana Harbor.
The homophone of "blew" is "blue." "Blew" is the past tense of "blow," while "blue" refers to a color.
You blew it means you failed.