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BillC |
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#1
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Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 655 Joined: 24-April 15 From: Silver Spring, MD Member No.: 18,667 Region Association: MidAtlantic Region ![]() ![]() |
The old thread asking this question got too long and disjointed, so I figured it would be best to start again with all the data stated concisely and in one post.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The problem: I can't get my car to idle reliably under 1500-1600 RPM. If I adjust the idle bleed screw to lower the RPM, the engine will slow down and stall. The car:
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Superhawk996 |
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#2
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914 Guru ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 7,141 Joined: 25-August 18 From: Woods of N. Idaho Member No.: 22,428 Region Association: Galt's Gulch ![]() ![]() |
OK - I’ll copy and paste unanswered questions from the old thread.
If I were you, I’d be going back and questioning all my assumptions. As I re-read this thread there are lots of assumptions being made about fuel mixture (no photos of plugs - are they rich or lean?). Have you verified the orientation of the dizzy drive? There are 12 teeth on the dizzy drive - each amounting to 30 degrees of advance or retard depending on how it’s installed. Have you verified that the “0” TDC mark on the fan is actually TDC cylinder #1 compression stroke? Likewise - as the vehicle is spiraling toward stalling have you tired zapping it with starting fluid and what happens? Has it been confirmed that when the engine is hot that the valves still have some clearance and valves aren’t being held open forcing the loss of vacuum at low rpms? Even silly things like making sure the coil has a solid 12v even as the vehicle is losing vacuum and trending towards stalling. Are you 1000% sure you don’t have an ignition problem? These things really shouldn’t be in question. Perhaps I’m just not caught up or missing details or things that weren’t documented here? If all else checked out after re-verification of assumptions I might even pull the oil pump just to see if I could see any ID on the camshaft nose (not all do). Again so sorry that we haven’t helped you get this resolved by now. I wish I had the magic answer in my pocket but simply don’t have enough info at this point. It’s gotta be very frustrating I’m sure. Keep goin, be data driven, and logical in the methodology (as you have been) and eventually this will get solved. |
BillC |
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#3
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Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 655 Joined: 24-April 15 From: Silver Spring, MD Member No.: 18,667 Region Association: MidAtlantic Region ![]() ![]() |
If I were you, I’d be going back and questioning all my assumptions. I tried to make the initial post of this thread with no assumptions at all, and tried to state only facts. As I re-read this thread there are lots of assumptions being made about fuel mixture (no photos of plugs - are they rich or lean?). I pulled the plugs when I did the leakdown test. The plugs were black but not gunked up. So, it confirms the idle mixture is rich. Car drives too well for the driving mixture to be too far off. Have you verified the orientation of the dizzy drive? There are 12 teeth on the dizzy drive - each amounting to 30 degrees of advance or retard depending on how it’s installed. Have you verified that the “0” TDC mark on the fan is actually TDC cylinder #1 compression stroke? Yes, I did. I confirmed the mark on the fan using the chopstick-in-the-spark-plug-hole method, and it is right on. And, when I installed the dizzy, I adjusted the drive to match the 12 degree angle shown in the diagram (it was 1 tooth off from the previous owner). Likewise - as the vehicle is spiraling toward stalling have you tired zapping it with starting fluid and what happens? Have not tried that, mostly because I don't have any starting fluid. However, the engine responds immediately and revs up when the throttle is cracked open. Has it been confirmed that when the engine is hot that the valves still have some clearance and valves aren’t being held open forcing the loss of vacuum at low rpms? The leakdown test seems like a good confirmation that the valves are closing completely. There's no way I'd get under 5% leakdown on all cylinders if any of the valves were held open. Even silly things like making sure the coil has a solid 12v even as the vehicle is losing vacuum and trending towards stalling. Are you 1000% sure you don’t have an ignition problem? Everything in the ignition system is new. New dizzy, new coil, new plugs, new high tension wires. And, a failing ignition system usually manifests first at high RPMS and/or load, not idle. Even the battery is new, and I keep it on a maintenance charger when I'm not driving it. If all else checked out after re-verification of assumptions I might even pull the oil pump just to see if I could see any ID on the camshaft nose (not all do). Can't do that without pulling the engine, and I'm really trying to avoid that. Especially since I won't have time to do all that work before NEG6. Again so sorry that we haven’t helped you get this resolved by now. I wish I had the magic answer in my pocket but simply don’t have enough info at this point. It’s gotta be very frustrating I’m sure. Keep goin, be data driven, and logical in the methodology (as you have been) and eventually this will get solved. Yes, it has been extremely frustrating. This engine runs well, except for the idle. I really don't want to have to pull the engine and tear it apart -- I finally got it back together and running after sitting in my garage for nearly 5 years. Gotta figure out why the engine isn’t pulling vacuum at idle. Yes, and I have no idea why. I wouldn't have suspected the cam, except I keep running into comments about cams not being compatible with D-Jet. Unfortunately, none of these comments ever specify how that incompatibility manifests, so there's nothing I can point to that says "yes, this is it" or "no, it's something else". At this point, I've pretty much run out of ideas. That's why I keep asking for help. The engine probably has less than 500 miles on it since the rebuild (odometer is broken, and the PO did not keep great records), so maybe it just hasn't finished breaking in yet. I don't know. The car barely ran when I received it from the shipping company, and I had assumed that was because they had messed up the installation of the D-Jet system (mismatched components, incorrect components, an open vacuum hose, etc. Details in the un-DAPO thread). |
jcd914 |
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#4
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Advanced Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 2,096 Joined: 7-February 08 From: Sacramento, CA Member No.: 8,684 Region Association: Northern California ![]() |
It sounds like you may have this figured but I had a similar idle problem.
I was not dealing with a newly built engine with unknown parts, it is a euro spec D-jet 2.0L with an Elgin D-jet cam. I could not get it to hold idle below about 1200 -1400 rpm once it was warm. I had a coil fail and engine would not run anymore. I replaced the coil and this helped the idle problem a little but did not fix it. So I looked into the ignition system, not really testing just swapping parts I already had, new plugs, new wires, swapped distributors, added Pertronix, swapped to Compu-fire. I even purchased a Bluetooth 123Ignition distributor in one of the group buys. These made some improvement but no fix. At some point I jumped power to coil directly from the battery and that made a big improvement. Voltmeter verified I was not getting good voltage from the battery through Ignition switch, fuse panel, engine compartment relay panel to the coil. I took a short cut and installed a relay from the battery to the coil that is triggered by the original coil wire. I now have a solid idle at 800 rpm if I set it there. I have my hot idle set to around 1000 - 1100 because my Aux air valve does not open as far as it should. I can sit on the doorsill and start the engine without using the gas pedal and it starts and holds an idle, no mater the temperature. I did not go about tracing and testing as I should have and I still should fix the wiring but with good solid voltage to the coil it works better that it ever has. Might be worth getting out a voltmeter and see what voltage you actually have at the coil. Jim Even silly things like making sure the coil has a solid 12v even as the vehicle is losing vacuum and trending towards stalling. Are you 1000% sure you don’t have an ignition problem? Everything in the ignition system is new. New dizzy, new coil, new plugs, new high tension wires. And, a failing ignition system usually manifests first at high RPMS and/or load, not idle. Even the battery is new, and I keep it on a maintenance charger when I'm not driving it. |
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