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Pressure Washer — Smokes

TICKET #SE-5017
safety intro
Safety checkpoint

Before you begin

If it's smoking heavily or you smell strong burning, shut it off immediately and let it cool before inspecting further.

Full Pressure Washer — Smokes guide

Use the interactive tool above for a personalized, step-by-step diagnosis — it asks one question at a time and takes you straight to the fix that matches your answers. Everything it can tell you is also written out below, in full, if you'd rather read through every possible cause first.

Safety notes

Before you begin

If it's smoking heavily or you smell strong burning, shut it off immediately and let it cool before inspecting further.

Possible causes and how to fix them

Oil in the wrong place from tipping or servicing

Tipping the unit lets oil drain into the cylinder or air filter housing, which burns off as white smoke on the next start — usually harmless.

  1. Check the dipstick — if overfilled, drain to the correct level.
  2. Check the air filter — if oil-soaked, clean or replace it.
  3. Run it until the smoke clears, typically within a few minutes.
  4. Store the unit upright going forward.

Parts that may help: engine-model-specific air filter, SAE 30 / 10W-30 small engine oil

Likely normal condensation burn-off

A brief puff of white/gray smoke on a cold start is often just condensation burning off and normal.

  1. Let it run (trigger squeezed) and watch whether the smoke clears within a minute or two — if so, no action needed.
  2. If it persists or worsens, check the oil level and consider the blue-smoke path in this guide.

Overly rich fuel mixture

Black smoke means too much fuel relative to air — a stuck choke or clogged air filter are the most common, easiest-to-fix causes.

  1. Check the choke linkage for a stuck spring or debris.
  2. Clean or replace the air filter if dirty.
  3. Confirm the smoke clears afterward — if not, the carburetor may need cleaning.

Parts that may help: engine-model-specific air filter, carburetor/choke cleaner spray

Engine burning oil — likely worn rings or valve seals

Blue smoke means oil is getting into the combustion chamber and burning — usually worn piston rings or valve seals. Internal wear, not a simple parts swap.

  1. Check the oil level first — overfilling can sometimes cause blue smoke and is worth ruling out.
  2. If oil level is correct and smoke persists, this is a good candidate for a local small engine shop — a compression test will help confirm ring/cylinder wear.

Parts that may help: small engine compression tester

If this doesn't resolve it, this is a good candidate for a local small engine shop rather than continued DIY diagnosis.

Common causes ruled out — needs deeper diagnosis

Choke and air filter are ruled out, so a rich mixture is likely coming from the carburetor itself — a stuck float or worn needle valve.

  1. Optional: inspect the carburetor float and needle valve for sticking or wear.
  2. Otherwise, this is a good candidate for a local small engine shop.

Parts that may help: engine-model-specific carburetor rebuild kit

If this doesn't resolve it, this is a good candidate for a local small engine shop rather than continued DIY diagnosis.