troubleshooting problems
troubleshooting problems
ok, i have a fresh rebuilt motor for my 88 gxl. i have headers, no cats, and dual mufflers. the car has been running rich since the new motor was put in. i thought after some break in miles, this problem would go away. the car now has about 500 miles on it, and still the same problem. i did install an air fuel gauge(i know they are not accurate, im just using it for a general idea of where im at). when the car is warm, and at idle it runs at about 1800 rpms and a/f gauge says its rich. when i get on the throttle, it goes totally lean, then jumps back to rich. could this be the maf? the fuel preesure screw is set totally lean also. im stumped on this one. anyone got any ideas?
ok i tested the air fuel meter- everything is within spec, but im not sure on one reading. it says in the fsm that resistance should be between 50 and 500 ohms between E2 and Vs when the door is open and closed. my readings were about 250 ohms closed, and 350 ohms open. the other thing i noticed was after the door closes, the resistance goes very slowly back down to 250ish. i can actuall watch it count down every number on my meter. is this normal or should it be more of an instsant change on the meter? this fsm isnt too specific
dude... to set tps you can either do the two light method wich i like better or you can use an ohmmeter. to use an ommeter disconnect the tps sensor... the connector that you disconnect should be about at the secondary fuel rail, put the black lead of the ohmeter on the black wire and the red lead on the ohmeter on to the green wire. then turn the screw untill at rest/idle (do this with the car off, but key on in ignition and you have to put a jumper wire in the initial set coupler while doing this so the computer reads the change)... anyway turn the screw so at rest/idle the tps sensor is reading just a little over 1 ohm... prolly about 1.2 would be best, and then do a sweep (very slowly and gradually open the throttle and make sure there are no "opens" in the reading) and when fully open should not read more than 6 ohms, if it does then the sensor is bad. i use the two light method. but thats a whole nother story. pm me if you need more info ill be glad to help out.
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Originally Posted by evilfocus
ok i tested the air fuel meter- everything is within spec, but im not sure on one reading. it says in the fsm that resistance should be between 50 and 500 ohms between E2 and Vs when the door is open and closed. my readings were about 250 ohms closed, and 350 ohms open. the other thing i noticed was after the door closes, the resistance goes very slowly back down to 250ish. i can actuall watch it count down every number on my meter. is this normal or should it be more of an instsant change on the meter? this fsm isnt too specific
It is not a normal pot. As you open it slowly you'll see the reading at first rise, then fall to zero and rise again, and fall to zero and rise again I forget how many times. All that is NORMAL.
But if you were monitoring the voltage output on VS with the key to ON and the harness connected up, you'd not see this rise fall bs. The voltage would start about 4.5 volts and as you open the afm flap to full open, the voltage would read something on the order of 0.5v at full open. Those are GENERAL figures.
Originally Posted by evilfocus
i know running no cats makes the car run rich, but this is very rich. whats going on?
and your multiple bumps have been deleted. Bumps are forbidden here in the 2nd gen technical section.
Dittos on the rpms being waaaay to high. You need to get the idle at IDLE. Below 1000 rpm for sure but closer to 750, give or take a few.
I've no idea why your rpms are so high. Some throttle stop screw might be set wrong or....................too many other things could cause it. You can't set the timing at such a high rpm IMHO. The ECU advances the timing above 1100 rpm, load or no load.
And....what *fuel pressure screw* are you refering to???
I've no idea why your rpms are so high. Some throttle stop screw might be set wrong or....................too many other things could cause it. You can't set the timing at such a high rpm IMHO. The ECU advances the timing above 1100 rpm, load or no load.
And....what *fuel pressure screw* are you refering to???
Last edited by HAILERS; Jan 13, 2006 at 06:45 PM.
Originally Posted by HAILERS
Dittos on the rpms being waaaay to high. You need to get the idle at IDLE. Below 1000 rpm for sure but closer to 750, give or take a few.
I've no idea why your rpms are so high. Some throttle stop screw might be set wrong or....................too many other things could cause it. You can't set the timing at such a high rpm IMHO. The ECU advances the timing above 1100 rpm, load or no load.
And....what *fuel pressure screw* are you refering to???
I've no idea why your rpms are so high. Some throttle stop screw might be set wrong or....................too many other things could cause it. You can't set the timing at such a high rpm IMHO. The ECU advances the timing above 1100 rpm, load or no load.
And....what *fuel pressure screw* are you refering to???
if that is the lowest possible idle (and you should be able to crank it all the way down to stalling) then you have a major intake leak.
You need to fix the basics before anything else
You need to fix the basics before anything else
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