Engine first start attempt., Couple vacuum leaks, Finally adustable idle. |
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Engine first start attempt., Couple vacuum leaks, Finally adustable idle. |
Olympic 914 |
May 23 2017, 07:30 AM
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#1
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Group: Members Posts: 1,668 Joined: 7-July 11 From: Pittsburgh PA Member No.: 13,287 Region Association: North East States |
Engine first start, Fail.
Yesterday I made the first attempt at starting the engine since rebuild. I had put two gallons of 93 octane gas into the tank and the pump runs as it should when turning the key. I had a timer ready to perform the 20 minute cam break in. I was arrogant enough to believe that the engine would simply start when I finally tried it. WRONG. It caught for a few moments then died. And subsequent attempts gave no better of a response. I had turned the engine over with the coil disconnected to build up oil pressure before attempting the start. And thought I may have run the battery down some. Checking it showed 12.56v resting and 11.44 while cranking. I connected a big boat battery with jumper cables but still no start. It turns over and fires a couple times giving of puffs of exhaust, but does not catch and keep running. Pulled a FI hose and checked that I am getting gas, also pulled two plugs and they are wet with gas. I thought I may have flooded it so I put the battery charger on it and put it back in the garage. This morning I tried it again and the result was the same. It fires a couple times then just cranks. Everything is new. Cap and rotor, points condenser plug wires etc. injectors rebuilt buy Witchhunters , static timed when I put in the distributor. All new vacuum hoses, rebuilt MPS (set to 037 specs) ECU is an unknown but it worked when ran last (in ’89) all the wiring was carefully checked when installed Engine build is as follows. EA 1.7 engine built into a 2056 Using the djet FI with 2.0 parts, intake runners, throttle body, air cleaner, etc. HAM heads ported to RS+ and modified for the 2.0 runners Raby 9590 cam Guess I will start with rechecking the timing and go from there. |
Dave_Darling |
Jun 13 2017, 12:21 PM
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#2
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914 Idiot Group: Members Posts: 14,986 Joined: 9-January 03 From: Silicon Valley / Kailua-Kona Member No.: 121 Region Association: Northern California |
Agreed with all of the above.
D-jet runs the pump the following way: The ECU sees the "key is on" signal from the ignition switch, by way of the relay board and the "power supply" relay on the relay board. (See your relay board diagram from Haynes or Pelican for which is which.) When it sees the power go from "off" to "on", it will ground a wire that connects to one of the pins on the fuel pump relay, closing that relay and sending power from a fuse on the relay board to the pump. So, you need to make sure that the ECU is seeing power. You need to make sure that the correct fuse on the relay board (I forget which but you can trace the circuit on the diagram or just check both) is good. And you need to make sure that the relay closes and that you get power on the pump wires. And of course, make sure the pump's ground connection is good.... --DD |
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