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Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Rogue Valley, Oregon
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Hi Gang,
I tried for the third evening to get my car to run smoothly after that mysterious post-engine-wash-rough-running problem. I checked for spark at all cylinders by arcing the plug wire against the engine. I have spark. While the engine is running and I systematically pull plug wires off the plugs, there is an obvious drop in idle with all cylinders but 1 and 6. So, 1 and 6 appear not to be firing. I swithched the plug from 1 with 3 and found that 1 still was not firing. BUT, the odd thing is that the plugs from the non-firing cylinders appear to be DRY! They should be wet with fuel, right? So, do I have spontaneously plugged injectors at cylinders 1 and 6? I have had this problem, on a smaller scale before. It was cleared up by using injector cleaner in a tank and running the car at 4000 RPM on the hwy. Keep in mind, this engine is all new, right down to the spark plug wires and fuel injectors (rebuilt last summer). How do I pull the injectors to check for fuel flow? Thanks for any help. Troy
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Troy Past: 1975 911S Silver Anniversary-rebuilt and sublime. Past: 1988 Carrera-backdated with a 3.6 and all the goodies. Present: 2011 GMC 2500HD with the 6.0 & 4x4!, 2004 Toyota Sequoia (wife's) |
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Join Date: May 2003
Location: Manhattan Beach, CA
Posts: 2,350
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Start by focusing on what you did prior to problem.
Sounds like you got water in somewhere. How about the dist. cap? Check out this website (systemsc.com). It may be helpful. Good luck Lorenfb@aol.com
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Have Fun Loren Systems Consulting Automotive Electronics '88 911 3.2 '04 GSXR1000 '01 Ducati 996 '03 BMW BCR - Gone |
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Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Rogue Valley, Oregon
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Thanks Lorenfb,
I did check for moisture throughout. I also ran the car a while to heat up and back water out. I am leaning toward plugged injectors because I have spark. Hmmm, Troy
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Troy Past: 1975 911S Silver Anniversary-rebuilt and sublime. Past: 1988 Carrera-backdated with a 3.6 and all the goodies. Present: 2011 GMC 2500HD with the 6.0 & 4x4!, 2004 Toyota Sequoia (wife's) |
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Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Montana
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On one of my cars that was not running right I ended up moving injectors around. I was able to figure out that in my case the injectors were good, the same cylinders were dead. Ended up being two burned exhaust valves.
Hopes this helps
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1982 930, K-27, BL adj. WUR, Rarlyl8 Headers and Hooligan muffler, PK CDI, 22 and 30mm torsion bars, poly bronze bushings 30mm raised spindles and custom valved Bilstein shocks (by Elephant Racing), monoballs front and rear (by Rennline), Alton 17" Fuchs, Fred Cook fuse panel |
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You should do a compression check on those two cylinders that are not firing and a good cylinder to get an idea as to what the compression for your engine is. If the compression is low compare with a good cylinder than you should investigate why the compression is low. Could be a burnt valve like tops911 mentioned or could be you just need to adjust the valve clearance.
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Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Orange CT
Posts: 717
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I'm interested to see how you make out, I have almost the same problem. I did a compression ck and all are great. I ordered new tune up parts and an o2 sensor (time for replacement anyway), hopefully thet will cure it.
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Quote:
Do you have a strong spark in those cylinders? If the compression check is good, and the cylinder doesn't seems to be firing, check the wire, spark plug, rotor and cap. |
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I don't think the injectors are your problem, but to check them just grab on the nut near the injector and pull straight out. Point the removed injector into a container and crank the engine. You should see a nice spray pattern. If the injector seals are loose, you should replace them before pushing the injectors back in.
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Somewhere in the Midwest
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: In the barn!
Posts: 12,499
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You shouldn't have to crank the motor to test an injector that's out. Lift up on the air sensor plate slightly with ignition on, it'll spray.
Start simple! What kind of spark plugs do you have? Judging from your earlier post, I would start simple and work up. Blow air into your dizzy and make sure it is really dry. Check wire resistance. Even if the plug looks right it could be fouled. Get NGK plugs and ditch the Bosch's of you have them. IF you don't want to run out to the parts store, try swapping the plugs from #2 and #1. Start the motor and get a water spray bottle and spray a jet onto the exhuast of each cylinder, close to the port. If the water vaporizes, you have heat, right..important to do before the heat fromt he motor is transfered to the suspected cyclinder. I'm leaning toward fouled plugs... I had new Bosch plugs in my motor when I made my motor swap..all went well enough, but during the process of tuning the CIS, I managed to foul some plugs. New plugs right? Will it doesn't take much to foul those Bosch plugs. I chased it for weeks, replacing all my fuel components (mostly needed it anyways), even the injectors..might as well right, they are not expensive (less than a few hours' labor charge at the wrench). |
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Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: Marysville Wa.
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put #1 injector in #2, and #2 in #1. same with 5 and 6. leave the fuel lines attached, just swap holes. see if the problem remains on 1 and 6, or follows the injectors. all CIS injectors spray at the same time, so any line can be swapped to any cylinder.
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Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Rogue Valley, Oregon
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Thanks one and all.
The car ran well Saturday morning for about 15 minutes. It even had full power and reved to 6000 RPM easily, as normal. Then, as I was cruising down the freeway to try and get the fuel injector cleaner through the engine, it began to cut out. It would cut out to a greater extent as I floored it. So, I limped home and checked the fuel injectors for proper spray pattern. They all looked pretty much the same, but showes streams at small deflections of the sensor plate. Souk, the plugs are NGKs with about 3000 miles on them. They all appeared light brown, impying the mixture is OK. There was some carbon streaking on the insulater of 6 which can indicate a broken plug. I'll look at this closer, but all indications are that I have spark (plugs are dry, and the car runs great sometimes). I did switch a "good cylinder's" plugs for the "bad cylinder" (no. 3 with no. 6) and found that 6 was still not firing, as indicated by listening to the idle change as I disconnected the plug wire from 6. So, I think the ignition is working. Next I pulled the fuel filter and accumulator. I drained their fuel into a clean white rag and into a glass jar. No filth came from either ( I thougt I might have a catastrophic plug of crud in one of them). All looked OK. I put the car back together and went for a drive. Again, the car ran great for maybe 20 minutes, and then began cutting out at aggressive throttle applications and higher RPMs (say 4500 and up). So, now the car appears to run OK at a relaxed pace, say up to about 4500 RPM. But, If I do full throttle and RPM runs, the engine stumbles and cuts out until I release the throttle a bit. It still sounds like a fuel issue to me. Maybe electical/ignition that occurs as temperature increases. I don't know. This is a new problem. Since the rebuild last summer, I have had two episodes of plugged injectors with this car. THe car ran poorly and very rough with the injectors plugged. I put two bottles of injector cleaner in the tank, drive at 4000 RPM, and things clear out and it runs great for a couple of months. This issue I am having feels very much the same as those previous problems. John, I'll try what you suggest. From the time of my first post, the car runs much better. It idles normally (I let it idle for 20 minutes in the drive way with no issues) The car is driveable now, just not normal. WEIRD, eh? Thanks all. I'll keep you posted. Troy
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Troy Past: 1975 911S Silver Anniversary-rebuilt and sublime. Past: 1988 Carrera-backdated with a 3.6 and all the goodies. Present: 2011 GMC 2500HD with the 6.0 & 4x4!, 2004 Toyota Sequoia (wife's) |
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Join Date: May 2001
Location: Peoples Republic of Long Beach, NY
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Re: Could It Be Plugged Injectors?
Quote:
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Ronin LB '77 911s 2.7 PMO E 8.5 SSI Monty MSD JPI w x6 |
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Hi Noah,
I did the injector check. It appears that "good" cylinders and "bad" cylinders injector's have a similar spray pattern. Nothing dramatically different. Ronnie, my car came with the stainless shielded wires. I don't have this type on now, but a conventional wire. Troy
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Troy Past: 1975 911S Silver Anniversary-rebuilt and sublime. Past: 1988 Carrera-backdated with a 3.6 and all the goodies. Present: 2011 GMC 2500HD with the 6.0 & 4x4!, 2004 Toyota Sequoia (wife's) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Lacey, WA. USA
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Hmmmm. Well, your injector lines are soft, so pulling injectors and checking spray patterns and volumes is fairly easy. Like Souk says, just turn the ignition key on and lift the sensor plate...they will spray.
Ignition is (or at least used to be) the most persnickity aspect of engines, so just be sure your new wires are working properly. I replaced my wires again this weekend (thanks, JW) and the engine does run more smoothly. Water problems are almost always fixed by COMPLETELY drying the distributor cap and rotor. At high RPMs, ignition should advance roughly 30 degrees beyond idle timing. A fouled plug is still a possibility, and fouled plugs can work fine outside a combustion chamber and not inside (under compression). Spark under compression can be checked with a timing light. There should be no instances of non-flashing. Fuel filter and fuel tank filter are possibilities also.
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Somewhere in the Midwest
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: In the barn!
Posts: 12,499
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I bought a bolt with 17MM head and double nutted it to remove my mesh tank filter, better if you can weld a nut on it (got the tip from a Pelican Tech Article). Cost less than 8 bucks I think.
Have you swapped the injectors and driven the car? Up to 4500RPM??? I would still target the ignition. Everyone seems to blame CIS for their problems, but more times than not, it ends up to be an ignition problem..guess how I learned! |
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I wonder what would happen if he direct wired the CD box from the starter battery hot to both the constant CD hot and CD trigger on/off.. and a direct chassis ground to the CD box ground wire.. it's probably something I would do IF I wasn't so sure the miss was concentrated on 2 cylinders ..............Ron
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Ronin LB '77 911s 2.7 PMO E 8.5 SSI Monty MSD JPI w x6 |
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Troy,
Was the ambient temp by any chance above 85° F when the missing occured? If so, a bad or intermittent Beru connector is the likely suspect! I suggest testing the Beru connector separately from the wire by givving it a 'shake test' while connected to an Ohmmeter ... it unscrews ... as suggested in the following thread: Interesting Discover
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Troy,
I know you said you pulled the fuel filter and accumulator and it looked OK, but I would not be surprised if you have a fuel filter problem. I had similar symptoms to yours on my 80 SC. Ran great for the first 10 minutes or so, then cut out real nasty under load. I was a CIS owner since '83 and had learned CIS malady's can take on many forms. Because the CIS is so finnicky about fuel delivery it doesn't take much to make it unhappy. If your fuel filter isn't new, you may wanna put in a new one ---- fixed my problem that sounds just like yours. I decided the ultimate CIS fix was to drop in a 3.2 DME. Fast Eddie |
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Quote:
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Ronin LB '77 911s 2.7 PMO E 8.5 SSI Monty MSD JPI w x6 |
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These are good suggestions. I plan on replacing the fuel filter and accumulator right away. I also plan on swapping the injectors to different cylinders to see if the problem with misfire follows the injector. I will also replace the spark plugs and check timing/dwell.
The fuel tank filter is something I had not thought of. I will look at that too. I don't think the engine has any catastrophic problems like some have suggested because it runs fine sometimes. It feels like it is running out of gas, and then picks up again if I let off on the throttle. The ambient temperature hasn't been over 75 F, unfortunately. I am also going to have my mechanic, that I use once in a while, do a system pressure check for me to determine if my pump is OK. I was already scheduled to have a CO check anyway. Thanks all, Troy
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Troy Past: 1975 911S Silver Anniversary-rebuilt and sublime. Past: 1988 Carrera-backdated with a 3.6 and all the goodies. Present: 2011 GMC 2500HD with the 6.0 & 4x4!, 2004 Toyota Sequoia (wife's) |
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