At 10:10 AM 2/7/2002 -0600, you wrote: >As for the exhaust-ish smell emanating from the front of the >car: My mechanic tightened a loose bolt on the exhaust manifold, >and that seems to have helped. But there's still something foul >happening under the hood (nothing visibly dripping on the exhaust >manifold though). After I've gathered some more evidence, I'll >post another question here about it. Tim. Does the smell tend to occur after a relatively hard cornering or stopping? If so, small quantity of oil probably accumulates in the valve cover ridge, and when you turn, it spills over on the manifold. The manifold is so hot (hottest external part of the engine, DO NOT TOUCH IT!) that the oil will burn very rapidly, and will not leave any traces whatsoever. This happens a lot on my green sedan which needs new valve cover gaskets (will not mess with it till I decide to also replace the valve stems to eliminate the start up smoke). This is annoying and embarrassing, but its not too harmful to you and no harmful to the car at all. The oil burning smell is quite different from exhaust, so you may be able to tell. You could even spill some oil from your dipstick on the manifold when the engine is hot, and compare the smells. There is a possibility though that there is indeed an exhaust leak. If that is the case, you are more likely to smell it after a hard full throttle acceleration (that does not involve braking or turning!). Also, the smell will be similar to the smell at the exhaust pipes, especially when the choke is on and the mixture is rich (just like it is at WOT). Hope that can help you identify the source. D^2, 2x68, both hot-rod looking and sounding dual exhaust