T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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141.1 | A little more info? | TROOA::SCHABEL | Klatter-motor-pilot | Wed Aug 17 1994 10:04 | 9 |
| re:.0,
What engine/transmission option do you have?
When were the spark plugs checked/changed last?
Have you checked stuff like spark plug wires/cap/rotor?
Is the alternator/battery/solenoid functioning properly?
gary "whose_'78_stang_blew_a_fuel_line_last_week...."
|
141.2 | Followed the wires to the bad part...testing each component | CSC32::STPALY::J_LOWRY | Christ died and rose again for all | Wed Aug 17 1994 10:58 | 17 |
| Gary,
Thanks for the reply. I have a 302/c4 combination, spark plugs have
been functioning for ~ 1 yr. as well as the wires/cap and rotor. Battery et..
all work just fine.
I did figure out what the problem was. I grounded the coil out and found that
it was only sparking when the ignition would be turned off. This would only
happen once the engine was running at operating temperature for a period of
about 10-15 minutes. Turns out that the pickup coil in the distributor or
as the box says "stator" was bad. Replaced it and were running again.
thanks again.
jerry
|
141.3 | 'Stang heats up, then won't turn over | TARKIN::MORRIS | | Wed Aug 17 1994 14:20 | 13 |
| My sister-in-law has a re-starting problem also with her Mustang.
It's an '89 4 cyl w/ automatic trans. What happens is that the car
will run fine until she shuts it down. Then it won't even turn over
until 15-20 minutes of cool down when it will fire up and run until
it's turned off again.
The only thing I've noticed (but haven't verified yet), is that her
electric fan never seems to kick on. Can this be related? How can I
jump the fan to see if it indeed works?
Thanks in advance.... -John
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141.4 | internal short in starter? | CXDOCS::HELMREICH | Steve | Tue Aug 23 1994 09:55 | 10 |
|
I'd think there was a heat-related short in the starter. I would put the car
on a charging system tester, and moniter the starter draw (in amps) when the
engine is hot. If it's drawing a lot more than ~120 amps, (like 300+), then
the starter is fried.
Most general service places have a charging/starting system tester.
steve
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141.5 | Try this lot :-) | CMOTEC::JASPER | Stuck on the Flypaper of Life | Wed Aug 24 1994 06:21 | 18 |
|
If the engine wont turn over when hot, then there are 2 possibilities,
it could be either or both added together which is preventing the
engine from turning :
The starter motor will not turn the engine because
1. The starter motor does not have the power.
Poor battery, charging circuit, failing starter motor, loose
chassis ground cable between engine/starter/chassis/battery,
loose power cable from battery/starter solenoid to starter
2. The engine is too stiff when hot.
Faulty ring gear on flywheel, wrong oil in engine causing hydraulic
lifters to give excessive drag, overheating due to
water airlock/blockage to radiator/poor fan/carb & timing out of tune
...Just a few thoughts...
Tony
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141.6 | electric fan???? | TARKIN::MORRIS | | Wed Aug 24 1994 08:58 | 13 |
| Thanks for the replies guys......
I believe that the car has a new Diehard, and had a charging/starting
check when it was installed, but will verify.
I'm still leaning myself towards this electric fan not kicking on,
which causes the 'ole temp gauge to climb right up... thus no re-
start until cooldown.
What steps can I go through to verify the fan first of all works, and
then backtrack through the sensors? I verified that the fuse is ok ;')
Thanks for the input...... -John
|
141.7 | ??????????????? | CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Wed Aug 24 1994 12:27 | 10 |
| Z 2. The engine is too stiff when hot.
Z Faulty ring gear on flywheel, wrong oil in engine causing hydraulic
Z lifters to give excessive drag, overheating due to
Z water airlock/blockage to radiator/poor fan/carb & timing out of tune
HUH??????????????
Oil making the lifters drag? Engine heat makes the flywheel faulty?
|
141.8 | find the real problem.... | CSC32::J_KALINOWSKI | Forget NAM?....NEVER! | Wed Aug 24 1994 16:53 | 10 |
|
I have had engines so damn hot that the exhaust manifolds were
glowing red-hot....and the starter motor still cranked them over.
This sceanario is repeated every weekend at dragstrips across
the United States. As a final word here, let me tell you just how hot.
I never had a problem cranking over a 12.6:1 big block chevy even when
the oil temperature was 315 degrees and the cooling system was opening
a 18 LB. radiator cap. Now thats M*^&(% H#$. YES!
-john
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141.9 | Yea, an overheated engine will usually spin over just fine | CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Thu Aug 25 1994 09:19 | 6 |
| I agree. I've had engines that were spewing coolant out everywhere when
they overheated and boiled over and I was never presented with one that
wouldn't spin over and eventually start so that I could get the coolant
circulating to refill the system.
They sure ping a lot when they're hot but the usually fire right up.
|
141.10 | Just sharing my experiences... | CMOTEC::JASPER | Stuck on the Flypaper of Life | Thu Aug 25 1994 10:50 | 22 |
|
.3 was referring to a 4-cyl mustang. My experience of 4-cyls is that
they are not overengineered to the degree that mighty V8's are. I think
.3 was referring to an ordinary street car.
I have a 4-cyl which overheated & would not turn until cool. The fault
was an airlock in the cooling system. It would run & ping, but would
not restart.
A colleague has a Ford 302 which will not start when hot because the
hydraulic lifters are still full of oil which means that the starter
motor has to lift the valves over their full travel. When cold, the oil
has bled down & the starter motor has less work to do. This is
probably only a European problem, as we dont always use the USA starter
motors which no doubt produce a great deal more torque. Nevertheless it
could highlight a marginal starter motor problem.
Ring-gear ? Sorry, you're right, that one doesnt fit the symptom,
my apologies.
You can test the fan theory by wiring the fan via a fuse direct from
the battery so the fan runs permanently.
|
141.11 | | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Fri Aug 26 1994 14:00 | 6 |
| didn't a lot of the big blocks have hot start problems requiring
a heat shield to be installed around the starter ??
Brian V
|
141.12 | backwards | CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO | A Smith & Wesson beats four aces, Tow trucks beat Chapman Locks | Mon Aug 29 1994 07:41 | 34 |
|
> I have a 4-cyl which overheated & would not turn until cool. The fault
> was an airlock in the cooling system. It would run & ping, but would
> not restart.
"turn"? or "fire up"? Heat shouldn't prevent the crank from turning. It
WILL prevent the engine from starting quickly but it WILL spin over. If
the engine wouldn't spin, the starter was most likely binding or the field
and armature were coming in contact with each other due to the above-normal
heat AND worn armature bushings. The bushings are worn almost far enough
to cause problems all the time but are only causing problems when the
starter swells. Eventually, the engine won't spin over at all due to
field/armature contact.
> A colleague has a Ford 302 which will not start when hot because the
> hydraulic lifters are still full of oil which means that the starter
> motor has to lift the valves over their full travel. When cold, the oil
> has bled down & the starter motor has less work to do.
You have it backwards, Hot oil isn't thick enough to keep the lifters
pumped up so the valves don't open far enough. Clicking lifters get louder
as the oil thins out because the oil viscosity isn't high enough to keep
the lifters at the proper length.
Worn lifters that are left to sit overnight will bleed down, too, if the
engine was put away with the oil hot. Again, the valves won't open far
enough.
Cold oil will hold a lifter up better but not until AFTER the engine fires
up.
The only way the lifter can hold the valve open, especially on a worn out
engine, is if the valve lash is adjusted too tight in the first place.
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141.13 | Heatshield fixed it.. | CMOTEC::JASPER | Stuck on the Flypaper of Life | Thu Nov 24 1994 06:11 | 9 |
| Well,
That was the prognosis as delivered to me. Now, lets get to the facts.
This 302 uses a starter from a Ford Essex 3.0 litre V6. When I
mentioned the Heat shield theory from -.2 this was tried. The shield
was placed between the starter & the exhaust manifold. Cold air was
ducted to the starter. The hot-start problem was then cured.
Tony.
|