This
Nasa Report on the year 2000 DC8 incident should give you some information.
The interesting fact is, that they used the engines 69 hours after passing the ash cloud without any overt symptoms.
The detailed analysis showed severe damage to the engines.
Sorry for my bad, german influenced grammar.
Save flight
Thomas
PS: Short summary of the report (with highlights on relevant points)
SUMMARY
In the early morning hours of February 28, 2000, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) DC-8 Airborne Sciences research airplane inadvertently flew through a diffuse plume of
volcanic ash from the Mt. Hekla volcano. There were no indications to the flight crew, but sensitive
onboard instruments detected the 35-hr-old ash plume. Upon landing there was no visible damage to the
airplane or engine first-stage fan blades; later borescope inspection of the engines revealed clogged
turbine cooling air passages. The engines were removed and overhauled at a cost of $3.2 million. Satellite
data analysis of the volcanic ash plume trajectory indicated the ash plume had been transported further
north than predicted by atmospheric effects. Analysis of the ash particles collected in cabin air heat
exchanger filters showed strong evidence of volcanic ash, most of which may have been ice-coated (and
therefore less damaging to the airplane) at the time of the encounter. Engine operating temperatures at the
time of the encounter were sufficiently high to cause melting and fusing of ash on and inside
high-pressure turbine blade cooling passages. There was no evidence of engine damage in the engine
trending results, but some of the turbine blades had been operating partially uncooled and may have had a
remaining lifetime of as little as 100 hr. There are currently no fully reliable methods available to flight
crews to detect the presence of a diffuse, yet potentially damaging volcanic ash cloud.