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Random non-F-body automotive rant

 
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aaron_sK
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Joined: 23 Jan 2006
Posts: 8834
Location: Back in beautiful Tacompton

1987 Chevrolet Camaro IROC-Z

PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 8:28 pm    Post subject: Random non-F-body automotive rant Reply with quote

Admitedly this is a long and pointless post, but I'm completely ticked off, so here goes.

About three months ago, the O2 sensor on my work car (1991 Ford Thunderbird w/NA V6) goes out. The car still ran acceptably well, and since I didn't feel like putting money into a car I was planning on selling, I decided to just leave it alone up until the time I actually did try and sell it. Unfortunatly the EEC defaulted to max rich fuel setting, and I was getting all of about 12mpg.

After a few weeks of putting about $20 worth of gas in it a week, I broke down and pulled the old paperclip thing to blink the codes out of the CEL. Sure enough left bank HEGO came back as bad. So after spending $52 ona new sensor, and $15 on a socket to remove the old sensor, I finally get a day off when it is not pouring down rain, so I decide to change it.

Long story short, about an hours worth of work later I fire it up, no exhaust leaks, everything seems to run fine. I run it about 15 miles down the freeway to heat the engine up completely, and the car is running perfect. No problems at all. For the first time in a long time I actually enjoyed driving that damn Ford. Rolling Eyes

After my successful fix I'm feeling pretty good, and I decide to get some gas, and drive to the bank. I stop by the Shell station and buy $15 of "V-Power" premium (that car's EFI will not run on anything less than 89 octane, and so I usually run premium). 15 bucks turns out to be just over 6 gallons. I make it maybe 3 miles before I'm sitting at a light and the car starts to shudder and shake at idle. Thinking maybe I stirred up crud on the bottom of the tank, I pop it up into Neutral at the light, and rev the engine a little. Damn thing starts bucking like a sonofagun, but the wierdest thing is that it doesn't stall. Doesn't even come close to stalling.

Off the light I had no power at all, it was struggling just to get up to 30mph. I pulled into the bank, took care of my s***, and then pulled into a parking lot around the corner. I checked my plug wires, checked the new O2 sensor, and a few other things to rule them out. The exhaust wasnt steamy, there was no under-hood steam, and no water in the oil, so I decided to rule out a head gasket. The entire time I hadn't gotten a Check Engine light, so I figured it wasn't something like a knock sensor.

I nursed it back home, going about 25mph. I talked it over with my Dad, and we checked a few things before deciding that it was probably water in the gas. Not having anything suitable to siphon it into, I decided to just buy a couple of bottles of Liquid Iso-Heet, and run it out. Ended up driving it about 35 miles, with not much change. Damn thing still runs like a piece of crap, but with no stalling, or Check Engine light.

At this point it runs, and it's enough to get me back and forth to work, which is all I need. Right now the only thing I can think of is the gas. The problem came on suddenly, one minute it's running fine, next minute stumbling. It's not a consistent thing, and increased RPM's seems to help it a little, so I've ruled out spark. The exhaust is flowing fine, no steam or smoke. Oil is fine. Car was to hot to check the coolant, but it's not overheating, and it's at normal levels in the overflow. At this point, I'm just going to keep driving it, but it is a serious pain in the ass. I just get done fixing one problem, and run up against another. Bashy Bashy

End of pointless rant against Ford/Shell/humanity/ect.

BTW, one other interesting thing: after I dumped in the fuel additive, I decided to run it down the 509 freeway, since I-5 is pretty much at a standstill around that time of the evening. I was sitting at the stoplight where Taylor Way crosses 509 where it changes from Frontage Rd. to Marine View Drive, and I glanced up in the rear view mirror, and happened to see an early 90's red TA. I also noticed that it had what looked like foglights in the lower grill. I knew I had seen that somewhere, but I couldn't remember where. As I rolled off the light, I glanced up in my mirror again, and saw that it was a vert. At that point I vividly remembered iansane's car, and his wierd headlight setup.

I didn't get that good of a look at it, since I turned up the hill, but I gotta tell you man, that is a hell of a nice looking car. I'm not what you would call a huge fan of the convertable f-bodies, but that one is extremely sharp. Thumbs up

Anyway, I'm done. Feel free to flame my car, or whatever.
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iansane
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Joined: 16 Jan 2004
Posts: 5742
Location: Bothell

1991 Pontiac Trans Am

PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 9:08 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

That sucks man... Sure it's not just a clogged fuel filter or something? Bad o2 sensor off the bat? Where'd you buy it? Try pulling it and having the store warranty (get a new one) to check it. Other than that I'm at a loss. Confused

509? I had to google that. Laughing My buddy lives up on dash point so I'm out there a lot. When did you see me? Any parts or anything you need come up to schmucks on 6th and pine. I work there.

Thanks for the compliments. The headlights need to be finished still. Anytime you see me, give me a wave or a honk. I'll probably be confused but I figured it out later. Laughing
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Schultzy89GTA
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Joined: 08 Jan 2004
Posts: 4417
Location: Gresham, OR

1989 Pontiac GTA

PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 9:26 pm    Post subject: Re: Random non-F-body automotive rant Reply with quote

Asdfga3 wrote:
Feel free to flame my car, or whatever.




Pokey pokey

hehe - you said I could!

Sorry to hear about your trouble. I don't have any help for you but that crud can be pretty frustrating. I normally wouldn't recommed a thirdgen to someone but you may have found a car with more problems... it would be an upgrade Very Happy

Get 'r' fixed.

-Schultzy

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Red Sled: 89 GTA, 383, TKO, N2O

12.73 @ 109.39, 1.793 60 \ 11.794 @ 121.16, 1.62 60 (old combo)
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aaron_sK
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Joined: 23 Jan 2006
Posts: 8834
Location: Back in beautiful Tacompton

1987 Chevrolet Camaro IROC-Z

PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 10:31 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

iansane wrote:
That sucks man... Sure it's not just a clogged fuel filter or something? Bad o2 sensor off the bat? Where'd you buy it? Try pulling it and having the store warranty (get a new one) to check it. Other than that I'm at a loss. Confused

509? I had to google that. Laughing My buddy lives up on dash point so I'm out there a lot. When did you see me? Any parts or anything you need come up to schmucks on 6th and pine. I work there.

Thanks for the compliments. The headlights need to be finished still. Anytime you see me, give me a wave or a honk. I'll probably be confused but I figured it out later. Laughing


I thought about the fuel filter, but would that be an instant thing? I've never had a fuel filter go out on an EFI car, to be honest with you, but with the carbed cars I've worked on it's more a gradual problem of weak idle.

I also considered that it might be the O2 sensor, but I figured two things:
1) The sensor is being fed into the computer, so any problem would throw a code.
2) There's no way in hell that little sensor could cause so much havoc, especially after I drove normally with the burnt out one in there for several months.

I bought the sensor at a Baxter that used to be a Pacific National.

I don't remember what time it was that I saw you, probably a little after 4:00pm today.

Anyway, tomorrow my Dad plans to run a vacuum check on it, and I'm going to see if I can get a compression tester into each plug set without to much trouble. Seems Ford engineered this car to never be mainaned in any way, since the throttle body and AC are on top of basically every engine component.
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Xophertony
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Joined: 13 Oct 2005
Posts: 5306
Location: Portland, Oregon.

1988 Pontiac GTA

PostPosted: Mon Jan 30, 2006 10:47 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

i had to pull the entire front body work of of a jeep charookie to change a thermostat once, so i know how you feel. good luck with the f*rd
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iansane
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Joined: 16 Jan 2004
Posts: 5742
Location: Bothell

1991 Pontiac Trans Am

PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 1:50 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Asdfga3 wrote:
I thought about the fuel filter, but would that be an instant thing? I've never had a fuel filter go out on an EFI car, to be honest with you, but with the carbed cars I've worked on it's more a gradual problem of weak idle.

I also considered that it might be the O2 sensor, but I figured two things:
1) The sensor is being fed into the computer, so any problem would throw a code.
2) There's no way in hell that little sensor could cause so much havoc, especially after I drove normally with the burnt out one in there for several months.

I bought the sensor at a Baxter that used to be a Pacific National.

I don't remember what time it was that I saw you, probably a little after 4:00pm today.


Most of the fuel filter problems I've had haven't ever been instantaneous. But you never know with the crud at the bottom of a 15-20 gas tank. Something big could've clogged the line that isoheet isn't going to take care of. (seeing as it's a water remover/antifreeze type stuff).

o2s are pretty devious. I don't understand how vehicles can run without them though. Mine would literally shake and shudder to hell when I burned that wire up. But my buddy's pathfinder run fine without it. That may be because it's a nissan though.

Either way, vacuum/compression are other good places to start.

4pm? Oh wow. Was I heading towards dash point? Did you honk? I seem to remember someone honking but my buddy was in front of me in his subaru.
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aaron_sK
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Joined: 23 Jan 2006
Posts: 8834
Location: Back in beautiful Tacompton

1987 Chevrolet Camaro IROC-Z

PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 1:03 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Vacuum test came back rock solid. The compression tester I tried didn't fit, for some reason there is about a half-inch of smooth tube before the threads start in each spark plug hole. I've got work tonight, but tomorrow I'm going to check the timing, and see if I can get an adaptor or something for the compression tester. I'd really hate to have to buy one just because of Ford's damn engineers. Rolling Eyes
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Sellmanb
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Joined: 30 Nov 2004
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Location: Tigard, OR


PostPosted: Tue Jan 31, 2006 3:02 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Checked quality of spark?

Fuel pressure?

Good places to start atleast Wink Welcome to the board btw Smile
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aaron_sK
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1987 Chevrolet Camaro IROC-Z

PostPosted: Wed Feb 01, 2006 1:33 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Timing is spot-on, suprisingly enough. I tried twisting the disributer back and forth to see if I could smooth it out at all, and the wierd thing is that it did exactly what you would expect from a timing change, but it was stumbling and bucking the entire time.

Also tried unplugging the new O2 to no avail.

sellman - I don't have a gauge or anything to check the fuel pressure, nor do I have an ohm meter to check the plug wires. I replaced the cap and roter today since they where a little coroded, and it did nothing.

ian - Does your Shucks sell adapters for compression testors to work with a longer spark plug, or am I going to have to buy a new tester?
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iansane
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Location: Bothell

1991 Pontiac Trans Am

PostPosted: Wed Feb 01, 2006 2:15 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

We don't stock one but that doesn't mean I can't get ahold of one. We've got a pretty large commercial side and the guy that runs that is a pretty young chevy dude that'll probably help me find it. I'll talk to him tommorrow when I go to work, see if he can find anything.
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Sellmanb
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Location: Tigard, OR


PostPosted: Wed Feb 01, 2006 9:02 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

another way to check spark is to pull a plug and attach the wire to it, have your buddy (cuz I'm sure you wont wanna do this haha) hold the spark plug by the plug wire boot close to some metal, and check the color of the spark, then report back with the color. That there should determine if it's a weak spark issue or not.


For it to all of a sudden just start acting weird instead of a progressive problem, it almost has to be something electrical, or very deeply mechanical (like bent pushrod or something, if that motor has pushrods? lol)
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aaron_sK
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1987 Chevrolet Camaro IROC-Z

PostPosted: Thu Feb 02, 2006 5:23 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

ian - That's cool. I'm going to call around tomorrow (today, whatever, been a late night) and see if anyone has it.

sellman - Once I do the compression check, then I'll start digging into the electrical. Right now I'm not to eager to do that. Mad
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aaron_sK
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1987 Chevrolet Camaro IROC-Z

PostPosted: Fri Feb 03, 2006 8:08 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Updated:

Compression came back good, range was 150-165 psi with 155 being about average. Checked and gapped the plugs, they were a little worn, but all were in decent condition, and weren't obviously damaged or not firing. Completely removed and rerouted the plug wires, checked all the boots and cable for damage. Everything seemed a little worn, but in decent condition.

Right now I'm focusing on two ideas:

1) An ignition solonoid or some damn thing has a weak signal. When I checked the timing, the light was plenty bright, with no missed pulses, but since I don't have any way to check the quality of the spark itself, I can't say for sure.

2) An injector is clogged, dirty, misfiring/not firing/ect. I seem to remember that some injectors can be tested with an ohm meter. But considering that I don't have one, and I have no info on the type of system Ford used, other than Chilton which claims it is a "TFI" system, it's going to be hard to check them.

For now I'm running premium gas (from Chevron, not Shell, to make sure I didn't just get bad gas) along with some Gumout Fuel Injector cleaner, and just driving it.
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aaron_sK
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Joined: 23 Jan 2006
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Location: Back in beautiful Tacompton

1987 Chevrolet Camaro IROC-Z

PostPosted: Mon Feb 06, 2006 2:36 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Heh. Well, fixed that. Cost me all of $1.69. #5 plug was bad. Runs great now, so I'm currently waiting for the next thing to go wrong.
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Mangus
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Posts: 254
Location: @computer in garage (Bothell)

1989 Pontiac Trans Am

PostPosted: Wed Feb 08, 2006 4:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

One cylinder not firing keeps you from going above 30 MPH? Yikes. I drove my TA for about a year with no #8 cylinder (injector took a dump) and the thing ran great, almost normal. I barely even noticed it (it just sounded like it was pinging).

Ford.
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aaron_sK
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1987 Chevrolet Camaro IROC-Z

PostPosted: Thu Feb 09, 2006 12:23 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

That was mainly nervousness on my part, mainly because I at first thought I had blown a headgasket. The fact that it was a V6 probably made the cylinder drop seem much more dramatic, but trust me, it bucked like a mother... and had no power at all.
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