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CIS Pressure problem
I borrowed a CIS tester and used this site
http://members.rennlist.com/jimwms/CIS/Testing/wur_specs.html 77 2.7 CIS engine Cold pressure 1.6bar (should be 0.8) valve closed System pressure (valve open) would only go up to about 0.7 when I was holding the pump on. It would drop right away to 0.1 if I let off the pump. When I connected the electrical no change I also noted that after about 10-15 attempts I could see wetness around 2 or 3 injectors . Leaking injector o ring, is this due to the number of attempts or real bad o rings? The WUR I am using was taken off a working only 6 weeks ago and has not been used? To get the fuel pump to turn on I am leaving the key "on" and pushing up on the lever inside the airbox assy Ideas?
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Shawn 77 Targa with 2.7 My never-ending work in progress that has been off the road since Mar 2004 ![]() |
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Correct me if I'm wrong but I would say that your motor is really full of fuel by now.
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JOHN 79 EURO SC "24 Years Later - The Dream Came True" |
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You are right.
Pulled the #3 injector out and it was like a lake it there. #3 seems to be the worst one
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Shawn 77 Targa with 2.7 My never-ending work in progress that has been off the road since Mar 2004 ![]() |
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I took the #1 and #3 injectors out and put them in a glass jar.
With those two in the jar the findings change Cold pressure is perfect .8 bar system pressure goes to 4.5 bar with the fuel pump on then drops to 2 bar when pump turns off. But it makes no difference when I plugged the electrical back into the WUR I have 12V at the electrical into the WUR when the pump is on
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Shawn 77 Targa with 2.7 My never-ending work in progress that has been off the road since Mar 2004 ![]() |
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CIS troubleshooting.......
Quote:
Shaun, You are not doing the proper way/method to check your control and system pressures. By lifting the air flow sensor (ignition switch ON), you're allowing the fuel injectors to deliver fuel unnecessarily to a non-running engine which will cause flooding in the chambers. Use a suitable jumper with in-line fuse and jump-start the FP by connecting terminals #87A & #30 (FP relay socket). This method will prevent the delivery of fuel in the combustion chambers during your tests. There are numerous threads and discussions about the subject. If you still have some doubts doing the test, simply ask and there will be plenty of help available from the members. Bentley SC manual has some pictures illustrating the correct position of the CIS fuel pressure gauge valve. Control pressure ---open valve; system pressure---closed valve. The exact opposite of what you did. Keep us posted and will guide you all the way. Tony Last edited by boyt911sc; 06-20-2009 at 10:07 AM.. |
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Tony THANK YOU . Sorry I read until 3AM last night and somehow missed the jumper cable. Damn that will be a lot of fuel sitting in the engine. Will it harm it, how should I "drain" it? Would letting it sit for a day work?
I don't think it would be a good idea to start it like that I was thinking the ball valve is CLOSED when it is perpendicular and OPEN when it is parallel. I will do the jumper cable from now on, Sorry ![]() Shawn
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Shawn 77 Targa with 2.7 My never-ending work in progress that has been off the road since Mar 2004 ![]() |
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I would also take out the plugs and turn the motor over by hand to get that fuel out of there.
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JOHN 79 EURO SC "24 Years Later - The Dream Came True" |
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Oil contamination.......
Shawn,
Depending how much gasoline has been delivered into the cylinders and amount that seeped throught the rings, your engine oil's integrity might have been compromised. Oil is cheap compared to an engine rebuild. Go check and inspect your oil and make the final decision what to do. Good luck. Tony |
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Will do. Needs an oil change anyway. Oil LOOKS OK, but I would like to get this running before I do the oil change, would that be ok?
I took out the plugs and turned engine over got rid of gas in cylinders Retested using the FP relay 1.1 bar (a liitle high?) 4.8 bar no change when I plugged in the electrical connector to wur?
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Shawn 77 Targa with 2.7 My never-ending work in progress that has been off the road since Mar 2004 ![]() |
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Designer King
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Toronto, ON Canada
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@ 15C your ccp should be about .9 to 1.35 bar. Your warm cp should be 2.7 to 3.1. You have the vac assisted WUR, right? 4.8 FP is OK.
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Paul Yellow 77 Sunroof Coupe/cork interior; 3.2L SS '80 engine/10.3:1/No O2; Carrera Tensioners; 11 Blade Fan; Turbo tie rods; Bilstein B6; 28 tube Cooler; SSI, Dansk; MSD/Blaster; 16x7" Fuchs/205/50 Firestone Firehawk Indy 500s; PCA/UCR, MID9 Never leave well enough alone Last edited by Paulporsche; 06-20-2009 at 12:05 PM.. |
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MORE PROBLEMS
Paul. YES I have a vacuum controlled WUR. Problem keeps getting worst. I thought since I had a complete set that was from a known working car I would save myself some time and swap the known good parts over. Didn't work. I swapped over the fuel distributor and the throttle body- since these both came from the running car I thought they would still be set up. Put everything in....no start ![]() I re-checked the fuel pressures using the gauges; with the valve closed as soon as I run the fuel pump using the bridged relay the gauge needle wraps ALL THE WAY around the gauge until the stop. Obviously the system pressure is WAY too high with these "new" parts. What is going on? I am getting frustrated I know that just throwing parts on something is NOT the way to fix things but I thought since the "new" parts worked this would be easier. Also does anyone have the correct vacuum diagram for a 77 CIS? I found the one for a 78 on Jims website. The two I have had different vacuum connectors This is how I have t right now- Front ports on throttle body- top one to bottom of WUR, bottom one to Thermo time switch and t to dist (plugged). Rear smaller plugs on throttle body plugged. Vacuum control was hooked up the same on both. PLEASE HELP
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Shawn 77 Targa with 2.7 My never-ending work in progress that has been off the road since Mar 2004 ![]() |
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Am I confused or missing something ?
Your "system pressure" (with the ball valve closed and using a piece of wire to jump #87A to #30) should be 4.8 bar and your's is 4.8 bar -- that's normal Your "cold pressure" (with ball valve open) should be around 1.6 bar and yours is 1.6 bar -- that's normal. What's "getting worse?" piscator |
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For 12v at your wur the alternator must be charging.
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1974 sahara beige 911 targa 1982 chiffon 911sc 1985 prussian blue metallic carrera |
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have you checked for return line blockage? Ive worked on two cars that were sitting for a few years, and both had a blockage at the return nipple on the tank, just a thought.
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fully disassembled, blasted, customized and restored 75 targa with factory hard top, 993 style turbo ft fenders, steel flares, C2 bumpers and rockers, 82 3.0 sc 9.5/1 engine with PMS flywheel, 964 cams, flowed heads, ssi's short geared 915 w/lsd, polybronze, bilstein,working lambda, modified and highly tuned cis, tensioners, pop valve, backdated exhaust and heater, 2300 lbs. no bolt left untouched. 1970 911E. Nice car but needs a re-do. |
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[QUOTE=davis911s;4734532]MORE PROBLEMS
I re-checked the fuel pressures using the gauges; with the valve closed as soon as I run the fuel pump using the bridged relay the gauge needle wraps ALL THE WAY around the gauge until the stop. What is going on? I am getting frustrated Make sure you doing the testing correctly. Ricks911s has a thread w/ videos or check one of my recent threads. I know that just throwing parts on something is NOT the way to fix things but I thought since the "new" parts worked this would be easier. "Throwing Parts" really refers just to buying a lot of new parts and putting them on until the problem stops. In your case, temporarilly putting some good parts on from a running car seems a good way to go about it. It is pointing out yopu may have some other issues, eg testing procedure, blocked fuel lines or vac leaks. Also does anyone have the correct vacuum diagram for a 77 CIS? I found the one for a 78 on Jims website. The two I have had different vacuum connectors Try page 46 of the 74-77 portion of the "New Parts Diagrams" PET on this site.
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Paul Yellow 77 Sunroof Coupe/cork interior; 3.2L SS '80 engine/10.3:1/No O2; Carrera Tensioners; 11 Blade Fan; Turbo tie rods; Bilstein B6; 28 tube Cooler; SSI, Dansk; MSD/Blaster; 16x7" Fuchs/205/50 Firestone Firehawk Indy 500s; PCA/UCR, MID9 Never leave well enough alone |
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Bland
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Check your fuel pump pressure and as mentioned above the return line. You should be able to blow into your return line and have it bubble at the tank. You shouldn't be able to wrap the gauge if the fuel has a place to go.
That stuff ran perfectly on my car.
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06 Cayenne Turbo S and 11 Cayenne S 77 911S Wide Body GT2 WCMA race car 86 930 Slantnose - featured in Mar-Apr 2016 Classic Porsche Sold: 76 930, 90 C4 Targa, 87 944, 06 Cayenne Turbo, 73 911 ChumpCar endurance racer - featured in May-June & July-Aug 2016 Classic Porsche |
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Quote:
Two things can cause the system pressure to be way too high: one is the pressure regulator in the fuel distributor can be mis-adjusted or frozen closed; the second is a blockage in the return line that goes from the fuel distributor back to the fuel tank. The regulator in the FD is a bleed valve/spring arrangement with shims under the spring to regulate the pressure to roughly 5.0 Bar. If the regulator is doing it's job, then the excess fuel must be free to flow back to the fuel tank for the FD regulator to be able to work. So to check the return to the tank, substitute a fuel line in place of the tank return, into a coffee can or similar. If you get flow to the can, then the fuel line to the tank may be plugged. If no flow, and gauge registers the high pressure, the blockage is in the FD.
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Quote:
I had the proper pressures with my "old" parts. But I could not adjust the mixture and idle to get the car to idle under 2500. Without it stalling or running it really rich. So I changed out the fuel distributor and throttle body with ones that were removed from a known working car. Now I have these new pressure problems Quote:
I have not checked, but I did NOT swap it, and the pressures were good with the "old" parts. Quote:
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If I blow into it will I hear it in the tank? And just to confirm the fuel return line you are talking about is the 17mm one that comes of the back of the fuel distributor and goes to the tank. There are two back there the one on the left side comes from the fuel filter and the one on the right side is the return? I have NO DOUBT in that! That is why this is so confusing to me. I will get this sorted out, I think it will be something small that I somehow missed ![]() Shawn
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Shawn 77 Targa with 2.7 My never-ending work in progress that has been off the road since Mar 2004 ![]() |
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Quote:
I blew air into the line and could hear it bubbling in the gas tank, it is not clogged Then I used the spare return line and attached it to the fuel distributor and placed the other end into a jar. Turned on the fuel pump and there is gas flowing into the jar. So the excess is leaving the FD and the return line is not blocked. What else can cause high system pressure? I am really confused Thanks, and Happy Fathers Day ![]() Shawn
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Shawn 77 Targa with 2.7 My never-ending work in progress that has been off the road since Mar 2004 ![]() |
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Bland
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Quote:
The return line also goes to the bottom of the tank. You might think about sending a blast of air down the return line with your air compressor. I wouldn't do much more than 100 psi. I feel terrible about this, you should have been able to reconnect the lines I disconnected for shipping and put my system on and go. My car ran really well with that system. Scott.
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06 Cayenne Turbo S and 11 Cayenne S 77 911S Wide Body GT2 WCMA race car 86 930 Slantnose - featured in Mar-Apr 2016 Classic Porsche Sold: 76 930, 90 C4 Targa, 87 944, 06 Cayenne Turbo, 73 911 ChumpCar endurance racer - featured in May-June & July-Aug 2016 Classic Porsche |
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