'Bubbles' in the oil are not good. Usually, they're not air bubbles, but water droplets. When you see them, it's a sign that your oil is contaminated with water and needs to be changed. A more serious problem is how the bubbles got there. Quite likely, there's a leak between the system that circulates oil (to lubricate moving engine parts) and the system that circulates coolant- the water 'jacket'. Could be something relatively simple, like a blown head gasket, or something really ugly- like a cracked head or block.Hey, be thankful you're not dealing with the idiot invention of the century, the dual action fuel pump. That little gem pumped water for the cooling system and fuel for the engine, separated only by a thin rubber diaphragm. Get a leak in the diaphragm and it pumped fuel into the water jacket and coolant into the fuel system. Usually, the engine died from trying to burn water, before the fuel in the water jacket overheated and exploded.
Without seeing the bubbles it's hard to diagnose. Often times cheap oil additives can actually cause this.
no
It means it has air bubbles in it.
Oil level is overfull.
Oil seepage..
There is water in the oil, it sounds like a head gasket. Remove radiator cap and start engine, if the coolant bubbles its a head gasket.
Next to the land of yellow bubbles there is a mean land of faries... so... I don't know what else is mean next to the land of yellow bubbles though.
If you mean bubbles of soap and water that you blow, no they can not.
Add oil peanut oil is best
I don't think bubbles actually have a color, and I don't think you can color them, but they are iridescent, like oil spots on water in parking lots. They have a rainbowish sheen, probably because they contain oil, or something oily.
If you mean soap bubbles, then bubbles are bubbles. Don't spend a fortune on expensive ones.
If you mean soap bubbles, then bubbles are bubbles. Don't spend a fortune on expensive ones.
crude oil