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#16
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thanks one and all. I will try to find time this weekend to test and post back the results.
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#17
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Quote:
Thanks, gl; sounds like the old "mash the peddle" routine you'd do on a flooded carburator. But, as I said, the car catches immediately, does a death rattle, then quiets down, but runs rough for 20-30 secs. or so. I've never had a starting problem in monsoon rains either, so I sorta' discount the moisture theory, but...... Wait...my engine say VW turbo!! Oh, no! No wonder I got this thing so cheap!!! Oh the humanity! Ron (jetzt, fahren auf der autobahn).
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Good s**t happened. 69 was worth the wait. '92 stock semi-pristine ebony - 160K '96 Grand Caravan - 240K '01 Miata SE - 79K '07 Chrysler Pacifica - 60k - future money pit. |
#18
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Ron,
Not sure about the death rattle - when I had mine it was probably a different rattle, at least mine could not fix itself without a major intervention (moving timing belt back into its place). I did have a flooding problem for a while - it would run rough and die, barely catch and die again, but the sound was more or less normal. Mash the pedal on a flooded SVX works miracles. It takes a few seconds, it starts reliably, it runs normally after that - I've had a leaking fuel injector for a year before I figured it out, and I had to resort to the full throttle start every time the car set more than 15 minutes and less than overnight. Put it this way - failure to run is either air/fuel ratio, compression, spark or spark timing. You can pretty much eliminate compression and spark timing - would not start at all (at cranking speeds both compression and camshaft/crankshaft sensor signals are at their weakest). So it is either water on spark plugs (pretty hard to get it in there with direct coils) or air/fuel mix. By the way, how clean is your air filter? |
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