T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1457.1 | Cold start valves | DCOPST::BRIANH::NAYLOR | Purring again. | Tue May 28 1991 22:21 | 15 |
| The graph and your interpretation seem wrong to what usually happens.
The norm is that the cold start valve is ON for the first xx seconds depending
on temperature. For example, in my Alfa, the valve is open for max 4 seconds
with engine cold an 0 deg outside temp. As the control module detects warmer
engine and ambient, it reduces the time the valve operates, being much more
sensitive to the former than the latter. At normal operating temperature, the
valve is shut off completely. Oh yes, it also is compensated for altitude,
although this is not a very common feature (?)
There must be a control module somewhere on the car. Mine is under the floor
panel behind the passenger seat! Keep looking - you've got a fault. BTW, how
does the fule consumption look? Running rich?
brian
|
1457.2 | All steam, cogs and gears | VIVIAN::M_CURRY | | Wed May 29 1991 09:59 | 24 |
| Hi Brian,
Thanks for the quick reply. In answer to your question, fuel
consumption is excellent, 32 MPG average (motorway, and into London).
Mixture running at 1.4% CO (should be between 1.2 and 1.5 for
manufacturers specifications). Checking exhaust colouration after long
motorway run (on leaded petrol) shows a perfect slate gray coating on
inside of exhaust. Mixture is pretty good I reckon.
Definately no electronic control module for fuel injection. The entire
system is made up of vaccuum switches, thermo-time switches etc that all
interact to produce the desired affects. There is an electronic
ignition module, but that has nothing to do with the fuel injection.
The way you describe the injection in your Alfa makes a lot more sense
to me, and yet that graph (which I have seen in two manuals now) does
seem to imply that the valve stays switched off for a while at certain
temperatures.
Any more ideas, thanks,
Mike
PS. Is the Alfa a Bosch K Jetronic sytem ?
|
1457.3 | GET A NEW ONE! | IRNBRU::WILSON | | Wed May 29 1991 10:44 | 19 |
|
V.A.G. have fitted these cold start valves to their cars for some time
now.
My Audi went through a phase were it decided "without warning" to
activate the cold start valve...at normal running temp!
The result was that the mixture was so rich it slowly "killed/starved"
the engine. After leaving the engine off for 10-15 minutes it usually
re-set itself, but I'd never know when this problem would occur again!
The final straw was on the M8 to Glasgow one night, it was wet and windy
when the engine began to lose power etc. After that it got a new valve.
Needless to say it did the trick!
The moral of this story is simple, after talking to the mechanics at
Audi this problem is rife within V.A.G. DON'T mess about with
it, get a NEW one....it ain't worth the hassle!
|
1457.4 | Alfa | DCOPST::BRIANH::NAYLOR | Purring again. | Wed May 29 1991 14:54 | 6 |
| The Alfa has a L Jetronic Bosch system. Mr IRNBRU up in Ayr seems to have
the right answer. Whatever is happening, sounds like your car runs fine
once the injector is disconnected, so there's obviously something wrong with
it or it's control circuit.
Brian
|
1457.5 | It was something to do with... | SUBURB::SCREENER | Robert Screene, UK Finance EUC | Fri May 31 1991 14:29 | 17 |
| I looked into how this works in my MK1 Golf, fitted with a Bosch
K-Jetronic system.
The cold start valve is powered from the starter circuit, i.e. it only
squirts when the starter motor is cranking. However the thremo-time
switch is in series to the cold-start 5th injector, so that it can cut
the circuit early if the engine is warm.
I should think that it's very similar to your set-up.
I've read about this problem in VW Motoring a while back, but can't
remember the actual cause. Have heart, I don't think the fix was
expensive. Will try to get hold of the article over the weekend.
Robert.
|
1457.6 | Another fix ... | DCOPST::BRIANH::NAYLOR | Purring again. | Mon Jun 03 1991 15:18 | 2 |
| In case you're interested, Dave Burden took the FI system out of his VW
completely and replaced it with Webers. Works fine now, so he says :-)
|
1457.7 | | SUBURB::SCREENER | Robert Screene, UK Finance EUC | Tue Jun 04 1991 14:48 | 4 |
| Is that those thirsty Webber 40's or the Webber Alphatronic Fuel
Injection System?
8-)
|
1457.8 | | DCOPST::BRIANH::NAYLOR | | Tue Jun 04 1991 15:35 | 5 |
| > Is that those thirsty Webber 40's or the Webber Alphatronic Fuel
> Injection System?
Dunno - write to him at OASS::BURDEN_D He uses the car for racing ....
|