Fuel Injector removal guide
#21
Long overdue this but just to confirm that the injectors were serviced, number 1 was way found to be way down on efficiency, returned promptly and with new seals (by Injectortune).
After much vaguely terrifying wiggling and thanking of the advisors above for drawing my attention to the pain of dropping stuff - and how not to drop stuff (top tip on the Denso tape!), the fuel rail re-located, fuse re-inserted, couple of turns of the key to prime the system and....
Immediate fire, lumpy idle until the ECU had gone through two fan cycles to re-set itself, then (unlike before) steady as a rock and (unlike before) no intermittent CEL, then, or since.
After much vaguely terrifying wiggling and thanking of the advisors above for drawing my attention to the pain of dropping stuff - and how not to drop stuff (top tip on the Denso tape!), the fuel rail re-located, fuse re-inserted, couple of turns of the key to prime the system and....
Immediate fire, lumpy idle until the ECU had gone through two fan cycles to re-set itself, then (unlike before) steady as a rock and (unlike before) no intermittent CEL, then, or since.
#23
For what it's worth, I'm also mechanically inexperienced (and fairly cack-handed) and this did look daunting - it's fine if you follow the advise provided in this thread though, honest.
I should also have added that economy has picked up 2MPG which at 400 miles a week on Super, isn't unhelpful!
#24
To the OP, if your car is the older design this may help
There is a white sensor (inlet air temp) on the rear/top of the inlet manifold. The original design recycles dirty oil filled air back into the inlet tract coating everything in shite. It maybe of benefit to carefully remove the sensor and give it a clean, check that mounting area is clear of gunk aswell.
There is a white sensor (inlet air temp) on the rear/top of the inlet manifold. The original design recycles dirty oil filled air back into the inlet tract coating everything in shite. It maybe of benefit to carefully remove the sensor and give it a clean, check that mounting area is clear of gunk aswell.
#25
Misfire cylinder 1
What was the misfire ? I have the same problem, done seals for the gasket. Cylinders and plugs and clearance
leak down test showed engine was fine
leak down test showed engine was fine
Dropping things through the manifold and spending hours retrieveing them certainly seems to be a common experience to every detailed injector service thread I've found - I'm warming the skinny-armed kids up for modern chimney work as I write
Great to hear that you've achieved better idle; that and an occasional CEL at hot idle (misfire cylinder 1) is why I'm doing it, having eliminated every other common cause, including cleaning the IACV myself. During which effort much skin was removed. But no hoses, no matter how hard I tried
If the CEL isn't MAP sensor, plugs, valve clearances, coil packs, IACV, earth strap (all done) or injectors then I'm looking at loom or ECU connectors. Fingers crossed!
Great to hear that you've achieved better idle; that and an occasional CEL at hot idle (misfire cylinder 1) is why I'm doing it, having eliminated every other common cause, including cleaning the IACV myself. During which effort much skin was removed. But no hoses, no matter how hard I tried
If the CEL isn't MAP sensor, plugs, valve clearances, coil packs, IACV, earth strap (all done) or injectors then I'm looking at loom or ECU connectors. Fingers crossed!
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post