2nd Generation Specific (1986-1992) 1986-1992 Discussion including performance modifications and technical support sections.

Load under 3000rpm = nearly stalls

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Dec 26, 2004 | 08:19 PM
  #1  
H4Inf's Avatar
Thread Starter
Rotary Enthusiast
Tenured Member 10 Years
 
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,100
Likes: 0
From: The World
Question Load under 3000rpm = nearly stalls

I posted this in the 1st gen area but got no response, and since my engine is from a second gen, I thought I'd give it a go here:

My engine is the 6 port 13B with EFI. Secondary injectors start running at about 3000rpm just after secondary butterflies start to open. Fuel comes straight into the secondary fuel rail, then around into the primary and back to the tank.

Basically the problem is that if revs are under 3000 and I put any load on the engine, it bogs down and nearly stalls - the second any load is put on it - instant death. If the revs are over 3000 then it will run fine. The problem is intermittent however... I can't pick what is causing it.

So basically to drive right now, I have to keep the accelerator pushed to the point where the secondaries are running.

Any ideas on this at all?
Reply
Old Dec 26, 2004 | 08:29 PM
  #2  
assman20a's Avatar
Full Member
Tenured Member 05 Years
 
Joined: Jun 2003
Posts: 164
Likes: 0
From: escondido,CA
the primarys are bad or going bad or there dirty. my motor is doing the same thing and i have a check light but it runs poorly above 3k rpm
Reply
Old Dec 26, 2004 | 08:36 PM
  #3  
H4Inf's Avatar
Thread Starter
Rotary Enthusiast
Tenured Member 10 Years
 
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,100
Likes: 0
From: The World
Might try running some injector cleaner thru the fuel system then...

I think mine isn't running as well as it did above 3000 too... I'm not sure though.
Reply
Old Dec 26, 2004 | 09:07 PM
  #4  
H4Inf's Avatar
Thread Starter
Rotary Enthusiast
Tenured Member 10 Years
 
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,100
Likes: 0
From: The World
Just thought I'd also mention that with load on the engine, just as you push your foot past the secondaries opening bit, it backfires.

I don't quite understand though - how with no load on the engine, it brings up the revs fine, and then with load, it is no good?

Thoughts?
Reply
Old Dec 26, 2004 | 09:27 PM
  #5  
assman20a's Avatar
Full Member
Tenured Member 05 Years
 
Joined: Jun 2003
Posts: 164
Likes: 0
From: escondido,CA
mine backfires to but it continues to do it

im in the midst of trying to figure it out
Reply
Old Dec 26, 2004 | 09:34 PM
  #6  
Kahren's Avatar
i am not a girl
Tenured Member: 20 Years
iTrader: (13)
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 1,916
Likes: 0
From: CT
the fuel should go into teh primary rail then around the back and then exit at the front of the secondary rail. and i hope you have a FI fuel pump in that FB
Reply
Old Dec 26, 2004 | 10:04 PM
  #7  
H4Inf's Avatar
Thread Starter
Rotary Enthusiast
Tenured Member 10 Years
 
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,100
Likes: 0
From: The World
Hmm my fuel goes into the back (near the firewall) of the sec rail, then theres a hose from the front of the secondary rail down to the front of the primary rail. Then at the back of the primary rail the rubber hose hooks upto the metal line running back to the tank.

Theres the stock pump into surge tank, then between surge tank and the sec rail is an EFI pump.

A bit off topic, but wondering if you know any drawbacks of running fuel thru the secondary fuel rail first?

Cheers
Reply
Old Dec 26, 2004 | 10:15 PM
  #8  
Adam's Avatar
Rotary Enthusiast
Tenured Member 05 Years
 
Joined: Apr 2004
Posts: 908
Likes: 0
From: King of the road
maybe a kangaroo took a **** in the tank? just a possability
Reply
Old Dec 26, 2004 | 10:19 PM
  #9  
Kahren's Avatar
i am not a girl
Tenured Member: 20 Years
iTrader: (13)
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 1,916
Likes: 0
From: CT
the fuel pressure regulator must be the last thing before the fuel comes out. that is also how the factory lines are ran. swap your lines.
Reply
Old Dec 26, 2004 | 10:34 PM
  #10  
H4Inf's Avatar
Thread Starter
Rotary Enthusiast
Tenured Member 10 Years
 
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,100
Likes: 0
From: The World
Here are a couple of pictures, I don't know what the pressure regulator looks like, perhaps someone can tell me!

Fuel comes in here:


Then goes from the secondary rail up top front, down to the primary rail at the front:


Then comes out the rear end of the primary rail to go back to the tank:


How does that look?

Thanks!
Reply
Old Dec 26, 2004 | 11:02 PM
  #11  
Kahren's Avatar
i am not a girl
Tenured Member: 20 Years
iTrader: (13)
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 1,916
Likes: 0
From: CT
i dont remmber the s4 setup off top of my head. but i dont think you have it right.
the fuel pressure regulator is the hat looking thing on the secondary rail.
Reply
Old Dec 26, 2004 | 11:09 PM
  #12  
88IntegraLS's Avatar
Displacement > Boost
Tenured Member 10 Years
 
Joined: Oct 2002
Posts: 3,503
Likes: 0
From: Mississippi
Speaking for my own S4 NA engine, fuel goes in to the primary rail first through the pulsation damper, then exits the primary rail and goes into the secondary rail from the back, then exits the secondary rail through the fuel pressure regulator at the front of the secondary rail.

It appears to me that your current hose setup does not supply pressurized fuel to the primary fuel rail at all because it has to come out of the fuel pressure regulator to do so. the fuel pressure regulator should be the last thing the fuel goes through after goign through the rails. It is the piece that bolts on the end of the secondary rail in the front with two bolts, and has a vacuum line on top and fuel line on bottom.
Reply
Old Dec 27, 2004 | 12:30 AM
  #13  
H4Inf's Avatar
Thread Starter
Rotary Enthusiast
Tenured Member 10 Years
 
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,100
Likes: 0
From: The World
Ouch! Thank for your assessment! I'll look at changing the way it's setup. I don't know who did the work on this or why they did it this way... Thanks again,

Have a great new year
Reply
Old Dec 27, 2004 | 01:23 AM
  #14  
RotaryEvolution's Avatar
Sharp Claws
Tenured Member 15 Years
iTrader: (30)
 
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 5,107
Likes: 50
From: Central Florida
S4 or S5 AFM? if it is a flapper S4 AFM make sure that the door is not sticky on initial break. you may want to get some readings from it at the ECU also and compare them to specs to be sure your AFM readings are accurate. if it tests ok then i would proceed to think it is a fuel injector problem as you have been checking.
Reply
Old Dec 27, 2004 | 02:26 AM
  #15  
H4Inf's Avatar
Thread Starter
Rotary Enthusiast
Tenured Member 10 Years
 
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,100
Likes: 0
From: The World
I have no AFM heh...
Reply
Old Dec 27, 2004 | 02:35 AM
  #16  
Kahren's Avatar
i am not a girl
Tenured Member: 20 Years
iTrader: (13)
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 1,916
Likes: 0
From: CT
:O where did the afm go, mayeb u need to go find it? or is this an aftermarket efi car?
Reply
Old Dec 27, 2004 | 02:41 AM
  #17  
H4Inf's Avatar
Thread Starter
Rotary Enthusiast
Tenured Member 10 Years
 
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,100
Likes: 0
From: The World
Microtech Digi Series 1 (not exactly the best ecu)... No AFM or O2 sensors.
Reply
Old Dec 27, 2004 | 02:46 AM
  #18  
Kahren's Avatar
i am not a girl
Tenured Member: 20 Years
iTrader: (13)
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 1,916
Likes: 0
From: CT
digi series one? never heard of that one? is this somethign for australia only?
Reply
Old Dec 27, 2004 | 02:50 AM
  #19  
H4Inf's Avatar
Thread Starter
Rotary Enthusiast
Tenured Member 10 Years
 
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,100
Likes: 0
From: The World
This is 10+ years old. "For racing use only".. it works... enough.

I've read the main problems are that it is pretty course - Not good for controlling large injectors as it cant get the timing down fine enough.
Reply
Old Dec 27, 2004 | 02:55 AM
  #20  
Kahren's Avatar
i am not a girl
Tenured Member: 20 Years
iTrader: (13)
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 1,916
Likes: 0
From: CT
ah i c, does it control timign also? have you been at the dyno?
Reply
Old Dec 27, 2004 | 02:58 AM
  #21  
H4Inf's Avatar
Thread Starter
Rotary Enthusiast
Tenured Member 10 Years
 
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,100
Likes: 0
From: The World
The ECU controls fuel only.. Ignition is electric dizzy. Havent dynoed because no money and I probably want to finalise my exhaust system before that.
Reply
Old Dec 27, 2004 | 03:08 AM
  #22  
Kahren's Avatar
i am not a girl
Tenured Member: 20 Years
iTrader: (13)
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 1,916
Likes: 0
From: CT
cool, good luck with that, let us know the results!
Reply
Old Dec 27, 2004 | 04:31 AM
  #23  
H4Inf's Avatar
Thread Starter
Rotary Enthusiast
Tenured Member 10 Years
 
Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 1,100
Likes: 0
From: The World
It is quite an intermittent problem, so I'll do a few things and get back to you all.

Also here is what the Microtech Digi Series 1 Pro ECU looks like, for future reference
Reply
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
stickmantijuana
3rd Generation Specific (1993-2002)
13
Jan 9, 2018 11:19 AM
Einheri
Single Turbo RX-7's
14
Oct 7, 2015 12:23 PM
spokanerxdude
Megasquirt Forum
3
Oct 6, 2015 12:28 PM
xXBrendanXx
Power FC Forum
6
Sep 17, 2015 10:10 AM




All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:35 AM.