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Nope. Intake gaskets have no coolant flowing through them. Only, sometime, a coolant hose going to the throttle body.
Son of a *****... Excuse me I have a neck to go wring...
This is really easy to do. You could probably have the valve covers off, tested, and back together before you'd drive it to the dealer, wait, drink coffee, wait, pay, then drive home. A coolant pressure test kit is likely cheaper than your visit to the dealer. Because you did the intake gasket, I know you have the skills to pull the valve cover.I'll have the dealer do that if they will.
This is really easy to do. You could probably have the valve covers off, tested, and back together before you'd drive it to the dealer, wait, drink coffee, wait, pay, then drive home. A coolant pressure test kit is likely cheaper than your visit to the dealer. Because you did the intake gasket, I know you have the skills to pull the valve cover.
Do you have broken exhaust manifold bolts? Could be leaking from that, and once it warms up, the metal expands some so the smoke will stop.So today I finished putting it back together and ran it until it reached operating temperature then I changed the oil. When I first started the truck it made the same knocking sound as it did before. It was definitely coming from down low in the engine. Then after about 2 minutes of idling it all of a sudden stopped knocking and then sounded completely normal. I'm not sure what that was about but I ran it for probably 20 minutes total and the knocking never came back. My guess is that the oil wasn't soaking the bearings yet.
Also, while I was changing the intake gaskets I sprayed some Seafoam in the intake ports to help clean them up a bit. So when I started the engine I got the usual cloud of white smoke out the exhaust. Then I noticed that there was white smoke coming from somewhere down by the exhaust manifolds on both sides... This leads me to believe that I have blown head gaskets. Could that be true?
I took this picture looking up at the engine on the passenger side. You can see white smoke towards the front of the engine in the picture however in person you could see smoke along the entire length of the heads.
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Do you have broken exhaust manifold bolts? Could be leaking from that, and once it warms up, the metal expands some so the smoke will stop.