Originally posted by paychk
HELP!
I just adjusted the valves and changed the cover gaskets, now that everything is dry (oil leaks) I noticed the # 5 injector seems to be leaking combustion pressure and fuel past the base of the injector. It doesn't seem to be coming from the high pressure line connection because it isn't spraying from that location, it seems to well up from the base. From what I see in the manual there is a copper seal at the tip of the injector and an o-ring at the top of the injector nut, the o-ring is gone, is that all that needs to be replaced or does the copper seal need replacement too.
What do I need to do to fix this?
TIA
A few things to consider:
1. If you steam cleaned the engine, you got water down there, and now it's boiling away, and forcing the old engine oil back up past the nut, since you said it wasn't sealed with the little square ring, any liquid can and will get down there. It'll go past the threads too.
2. If the above didn't happen, then you are leaking compression, in which case you need to remove the injector, clean out all the carbon down in the hole, and reinstall it with a new copper gasket at the bottom, torquing to 44 ft-lbs. Don't forget to get new copper gaskets for the return rail (You'll need to remove it at least partially to get the injector out and back in) and make sure you don't tighten the bolts that hold it on too much.
3. If you really do have fuel coming up from below (usually, it leaks down the side of the injector from the return rail on the "down" side of the body, where you can't see it) your injector needs some help from a shop that does injectors. It has to be taken apart, the pieces lapped to true and re-torqued, since the fuel is leaking between the body and the nozzle retaining nut (part of the injector itself, not the nut you see). If you have over 150K miles on them, you might want to consider new injectors - PW injectors run real nice

You can't do that part yourself, since both removing and torqueing the injector nut requires a compression stand to hold the body in and the internal parts together tightly to prevent things from breaking inside.
4. Fuel leaking down the side of the injector and running into the cavity below the retaining nut will slowly "boil" when the engine is hot, making it bubble and sometimes even visible vapor is seen. Just FYI.
5. Removing the injector can sometimes be really tough to do. Commonly it's done with either a small slide hammer that screws on where the fuel inlet is, or something fabricated to provide a strong, straight upward pull on the injector body, like a short segment of thick tubing and a washer, nut and long threaded rod with a nut on the end that fastens to the inlet threads. A few lucky souls have managed to get them out without, but I've only managed that trick on one I just installed. If the retaining nut is rusted badly to the body of the injector, and the body turns around when you loosen it, the entire injector is ruined and you'll need a new one.
I think I've covered pretty much all the bases here... . At least the common stuff. good luck
