It has a leaking head gasket or a crack in the cylinder head.
If there is no overheating or loss of coolant, most likely it is due to condensation in the exhaust system (pretty normal in cool or rainy weather).
It warms the surroundings.
White smoke is usually a symptom of a bad head gasket leaking coolant into the cylinder. If the white smoke stops after it warms up it could just be condensation from sitting for a while.
Warms
Yes, it's just condensation....as long ads there is no trace of smoke at all once it warms up. If there is some smoke with a sweet smell to it,then the head gasket or head itself is cracked.
because the warming of the engine causes condensation. and as it warms further the condensation in the motor and exhaust system become warmed into steam until it gets hot all the way through and thus stops because it is not condensating anymore.
If only when cold--normal. Condensation being burned as vehicle warms up. If all the time or when vehicle is at normal operating temperature--could be a leaking head gasket--allowing coolant into the combustion chamber
No. condensation occurs when water vapor cools and returns to the liquid state. Evaporation occurs when water is heated and becomes water vapor.
It's not smoke, it's steam. When the water in the air passes through the airplane's engines, it warms up and becomes steam.
Unheated garage, preferably separate from a heated building, is best . Condensation is a main cause of rust and when you put a cold car into a heated garage (presumably with humidity), that will condense in all areas until the car warms up. The condensation forms in every little nook and cranny. providing the garage is well ventilated
Wait until it warms up and melts
First the sun warms the ocean water causing it to turn into a gas which is known as evaporation. Clouds are formed from the gas (condensation). Then the cloud takes in lots of the gas until it cant hold anymore then it rains or if its cold hails or snows(participation) .