Black smoke from the exhaust: what it means

Publié le Diagnostic
Black smoke from the exhaust: what it means
My Auto Check-up

Black smoke from the exhaust usually indicates excess fuel in the combustion (over-rich mixture) or a problem with the exhaust system. Here is what it means, common causes and what to do.

What it indicates

Black smoke corresponds to unburned fuel particles or incomplete combustion. It often appears under acceleration, on cold start or under load. Depending on the engine (petrol or diesel), the most common causes are not quite the same.

Common causes (diesel)

On diesel engines, black smoke is often linked to a blocked or saturated particulate filter (DPF): gases no longer evacuate properly and black smoke appears under acceleration. A faulty injector (leak, maladjustment) sends too much fuel into the cylinder and also produces black smoke. The AdBlue system (level, injector, quality) can be involved. A clogged EGR valve and the turbo (oil leak, geometry) are other possible causes on high-mileage vehicles.

Common causes (petrol)

On petrol engines (especially turbo), black smoke can come from the turbo (oil leak on the exhaust side), the MAF sensor or a poorly adjusted injection system. Prolonged over-fuelling can damage the catalyst.

What to do

Avoid hard acceleration and long journeys at full load until the cause is identified. A diagnosis by a professional (fault codes, pressure and DPF checks) is recommended to pinpoint the exact cause. My Auto Check-up helps you gather useful information (engine, mileage, when it appears) to estimate costs before your garage visit.

My Auto Check-up

Réaliser votre diagnostic personnalisé

Décrivez les symptômes de votre véhicule et recevez en quelques secondes une analyse détaillée, des causes probables et une estimation des coûts de réparation.

Démarrer

Satisfait ou Remboursé

Si le diagnostic s'avère incorrect après visite chez un professionnel, nous vous remboursons intégralement le coût du rapport.