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Dog-faced pony soldier
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Help me diagnose - poor idle/rough running/low power from engine
WIN FREE PARTS FOR CORRECT DIAGNOSIS!!!
This one is a bit of a headscratcher. I'll even offer an incentive - the first responder to this thread to diagnose it correctly gets some free 944 parts - their choice of a set of fog lights, tail light lenses or a new cam tower cover. Maybe something else of similar value (we can negotiate) - point is, you'll get some free parts. . . If you think more information is needed, I can answer "have you checked this?" questions - just post 'em below. - - - Car is an 85/1 944. Here are the symptoms: - Car starts right up normally & quickly, vroom. No problems there. - Idle is a little bit rough (kind of like maybe one cylinder is intermittent?) - Fuel efficiency/MPG gauge (which is normally all the way to the right at idle) occasionally "twitches" to the left in conjunction with the rough idle/misfires. - When you put your foot on the accelerator all the way down (WOT/floor it), the engine will bog down and "pop" loudly once or twice or possibly stall out completely. In any case, it feels like it isn't good and probably not a great idea to continue doing. - If you put your foot about 1/3-1/2 way down, the RPMs will come up, but very slowly/gradually. The engine doesn't quite sound right - more like a Honda lawnmower than a Porsche. - The tach gauge appears to register correctly at idle, but as soon as RPM is increased it seems to be off by about 50%. If my ear tells me it's at 3,000 RPM, the tach will indicate maybe 2,000 RPM, for example. - Extremely difficult to drive due to lack of power/engine not wanting to "spool up" & roughness/misfiring occasionally - A small puddle of blackish crud (oil?) underneath the tailpipe outlet when I started it and got the RPMs up to (what my ear tells me was) about 4,000 RPM & held it there for about 30 seconds. Could this be simple oil fouling? Here's what I've checked so far: - Pulled the DME & checked the internals. Everything looks good visually. No burned smells or obviously failed solder joints. - Charged & checked the battery - Checked distributor cap/rotor - Checked plug wires - Confirmed spark at each plug - Confirmed fuel pressure at the front of the rail (flows when key is "on") - Checked coil output - Put some Seafoam in the fuel to loosen up any crud - Checked all the vacuum lines for proper seating/no leaks - Checked connections at TPS/AFM What else should I check? This one has me kinda' stumped. Car was running fine, then went out to start it one morning and it ran like crap (as described above). It's been this way since with no improvement.
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A car, a 911, a motorbike and a few surfboards Black Cars Matter Last edited by Porsche-O-Phile; 06-26-2008 at 11:05 AM.. |
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unindicted co-conspirator
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Fresno, CA
Posts: 1,660
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Jeff, check the reference sensors, it may have come loose
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'03 996 - sport exhaust, sport seats, M030 sport suspension, stability control, IMS Solution ‘86 928S3 - barn find project car |
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Toofah King Bad
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. . .and their plugs.
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» 1987 924S Turbo - Got Boost? « "DETERMINATION. Sometimes cars test us to make sure we're worthy. Fix it." - alfadoc |
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Proprietoristicly Refined
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: ~Carefree Highway~
Posts: 5,833
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Well I have been posting this a couple of times this week alone...
TPS http://www.clarks-garage.com/shop-manual/fuel-06.htm But I will continue to think about it. ![]() John_AZ 1988 924S + 1987 924S |
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Greasy Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Indiana
Posts: 1,457
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I had a similar issue about 6 months ago with my 85/1. After much swearing and head-scratching, I found out that the injector on my #2 cyl was causing the problem. When I took it out to find out what was going on, there was a chunk of crud in the injector that was causing fuel blockage occasionally.
It was an easy fix, and haven't had a problem since! Hope it helps! -Nick
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Owner: Bennington Motorsports www.benms.com Sponsor for Midwest Region 944-SPEC racing series -When was your timing belt changed or tensioned?? -Yes, I'm the crazy man that will loan out my 9201. Just PM me, I will add you to the list and get it out ASAP. |
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Back from Beyond
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Alberta, Canada
Posts: 2,697
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My first guess is the auxiliary air valve. It regulates extra airflow at cold idle to match fuel delivery. If it's stuck shut or even partly shut you'll get a really rich engine on cold startup - it'll do what you're describing. Then you'll get too lean when the motor's warm.
Also, I'll second many944's injector call.
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'88 944 Auto - project, kinda '87 944 Auto - died saving my wife '84 944 5SP - crushed under shop roof during snow storm All others GONE! |
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Back from Beyond
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Alberta, Canada
Posts: 2,697
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Again with the double post! Sorry.
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'88 944 Auto - project, kinda '87 944 Auto - died saving my wife '84 944 5SP - crushed under shop roof during snow storm All others GONE! Last edited by Slam; 06-26-2008 at 11:51 AM.. |
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winter-hater club member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: salt lake city, utah
Posts: 24,705
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your timing is off for some reason. this explains the odd noise when accelerating, the odd tach readings, the crud, the popping, the stumbling, etc. i am going to second the issues with the speed reference senders, et al. could be a bad ground, maybe even a bad computer.
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2000 Corvette - ????, 2007 Buell XB9R - Astrid, 1996 Discovery - Piglet, 2000 Forester "COOL PRIUS!" - Nobody Ever |
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Registered
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Fairbanks, Alaska
Posts: 345
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I don't think this is it but I would confirm that the barn door is working (not jammed) and the slide contact is good.
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Red 83 944 |
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Dog-faced pony soldier
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Thanks for the responses - I'm planning on digging into this a little this coming weekend.
I'll check the TPS although I'm inclined to doubt it's that simply because of the weird erroneous tach readings issue. Don't think a faulty TPS would cause that (but it might). Similarly it's difficult to see why the tach would be reading low with a bad/plugged injector but I'll check proper flow on each one. Simply because of the tach issue I'm inclined to think this is either a speed/reference sensor issue (although oddly the car does start/run okay, I'd expect to have difficulty starting if these were bad). Should I be looking at oscilloscopes? I've never done the speed/ref sensors and my understanding is that in order to replace them you have to drop the transmission out of the car. God almighty I'm hoping that's not the case. Anyone know for sure? I think I can diagnose them in the car with an o-scope, but assuming they're bad, how much of a nightmare am I looking at?
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A car, a 911, a motorbike and a few surfboards Black Cars Matter |
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winter-hater club member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: salt lake city, utah
Posts: 24,705
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i am thinking that it may be a spacing issue with the reference sensors. it is close enough that the car starts fine, but the signal gets weak when the flywheel is spinning.
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2000 Corvette - ????, 2007 Buell XB9R - Astrid, 1996 Discovery - Piglet, 2000 Forester "COOL PRIUS!" - Nobody Ever |
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Dog-faced pony soldier
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How would that spontaneously "just happen" though? The car was running fine and then one day "poof" out of the blue it just started running like crap. I'll check on Clarks for a diagnostic procedure but I dunno if I can adjust those things without it becoming a humongous ordeal.
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A car, a 911, a motorbike and a few surfboards Black Cars Matter |
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Greasy Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Indiana
Posts: 1,457
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Breathe a sigh of relief....
You don't have to drop anything to swap out the sensors (though you will drop what ever tool you use to remove those d@mn allen screws that hold the sensors in about 20 times in the process ![]() If you have a copy of the shop manual, it shows how to glue a washer to the bottom of a non-functioning sensor to properly set the spacing of the holder assemb. If you test both of your sensors and they are good but you still want to change/ check your spacing, I have an old sensor already modified for this purpose. I could drop it in a padded mailer and have it to you in a couple of days if you need to borrow it. let me know! -Nick
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Owner: Bennington Motorsports www.benms.com Sponsor for Midwest Region 944-SPEC racing series -When was your timing belt changed or tensioned?? -Yes, I'm the crazy man that will loan out my 9201. Just PM me, I will add you to the list and get it out ASAP. |
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winter-hater club member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: salt lake city, utah
Posts: 24,705
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just for grins, pull the plugs on the sensors, spray them with starter fluid, apply dielectric grease and see what happens.
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2000 Corvette - ????, 2007 Buell XB9R - Astrid, 1996 Discovery - Piglet, 2000 Forester "COOL PRIUS!" - Nobody Ever |
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Dog-faced pony soldier
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Thanks guys - I just checked Clarks and the procedure actually looks kind of simple. I'll try it out and report back.
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A car, a 911, a motorbike and a few surfboards Black Cars Matter |
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Toofah King Bad
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And blood. . .lots of blood.
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» 1987 924S Turbo - Got Boost? « "DETERMINATION. Sometimes cars test us to make sure we're worthy. Fix it." - alfadoc |
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Registered
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Up High in the Colorado Rockies
Posts: 44
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Quote:
But don't take my word for it, read for yourselves; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dielectric I know folks have used it "for years" without any problems but that is because if you use it lightly when the contacts engage they tend to scrape the grease off. If they are a bit loose and you get enough of this grease in there it will tend to increase the resistance. It actually works very well in spark plug rubber boots and others as it keeps the boots lubricated (does not break down due to electrical charges) and prevents voltage leaks.
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-Lou- Leadville, Colorado '89 951 Alpine White, stockish for now. Last edited by 951Boost; 06-26-2008 at 04:39 PM.. Reason: spl |
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Registered
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 2,370
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I would try to borrow a good used dme as it sounds like a computer problem or wiring to computer to me.
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Cars & Coffee Killer
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: State of Failure
Posts: 32,246
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I had a similar problem when I bought the 951. The BOV was shot. I replaced it...and it didn't fix anything.
Come to find that one of my vacuum "T" connectors had a crack in it.
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Some Porsches long ago...then a wankle... 5 liters of VVT fury now -Chris "There is freedom in risk, just as there is oppression in security." |
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Registered
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Dang it! I was way slow in this post. I went w/ ref sensors too. Also maybe a bent AFM flap, but that would have entailed an initial backfire caused by something else.
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Brian '86 944 NA '94 Jeep Cherokee 3" and 31's '86 Chevy C10 425hp '98 Dodge Neon (the wife) |
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