Fuching DJet issues *SOLVED*, Running out of things to try |
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Fuching DJet issues *SOLVED*, Running out of things to try |
rjames |
Jun 12 2019, 12:19 AM
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#1
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I'm made of metal Group: Members Posts: 3,913 Joined: 24-July 05 From: Shoreline, WA Member No.: 4,467 Region Association: Pacific Northwest |
Last summer all of a sudden my car wouldn’t stay running. If I could get it started the idle would hunt and the car would die unless I kept on the gas. Lack of power at times. All somewhat erratic.
Found that the MPS wouldn’t hold vacuum. Replaced the bad mps with a known good one. Car idles high when cold (higher than I think it should ~1600 rpm) so AAR is good, then when it warms up idle hunts from ~900rpm to the point where it almost dies unless I open the throttle body bleed screw quite a bit and turn the ECU knob just a few clicks away from full clockwise. So I did the following hoping to fix the issue: Replaced all vac hoses including intake runner to plenum hoses. New intakecrunner gaskets Verified plenum isn’t leaking New throttle body gasket Installed NOS throttle body Rebuilt the distributor New condenser Rebuilt injectors and flow tested New fuel lines Fuel pump is less than 2 years old Set timing and dwell with advance disconnected New CHT (resistance reads 1.7 w/engine off @70 degrees in the garage) Calibrated the TPS, even unplugged it to take it out of the equation, didn’t change anything. ECU matches the MPS (both correct part #s for a ‘75 2.0) Tried a known good ECU from a ‘74, no change. Feels like the MPS needs to be calibrated...but then again, these are all the same symptoms I had with the old bad mps. Replacement mps is from a Jeff B and was tested, but I haven’t retested it to see if it’s holding vacuum. (Don’t have the necessary tool, but maybe that’s the next step) Help! What am I missing? |
BeatNavy |
Jun 13 2019, 02:03 PM
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#2
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Certified Professional Scapegoat Group: Members Posts: 2,924 Joined: 26-February 14 From: Easton, MD Member No.: 17,042 Region Association: MidAtlantic Region |
Good news is it sounds like you confirmed the condition (lean), and you are getting closer to the root cause (failing fuel pump or possible obstruction in the line somewhere). Fuel pressure gauge would confirm it's on that path. BTW, don't cap the ports at the canister. Those need to be able to move.
The stock pumps are somewhat cooled by fuel running through them, so running without would burn them out (at some point). Not sure about the newer Bosch units. I figured those are pretty reliable (I have been running one about a year now), but who knows? I'm not sure about the canister. Either WTB for canister or bite the bullet and get a 1-2-3? It's pricey, but works like a champ. I'd work to get the fuel delivery situation resolved and then reassess the distributor. |
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