1999 5.7GSI PWTR
Ran fine 2 years ago. (has not run in 2 years)
Went to wake the motor up.
New plugs
New fuel filter
Had been flogged so I expected it to be a little rough getting it started up.
Engine is running very rich. Black smoke, barely idling.
- added fresh fuel to the tank
- dumped the fuel from the filter into a glass jar. Looks good
- tested TPS: center-tap 0.6 to 5.0 volts (0-100% throttle)
- tested coolant temp sensor: 930 ohms with the engine "warm" and 1400 ohms after it had cooled down some
- tested the map sensor
no obstructions / no leaks
5.0 volts with engine off
only drops down to 3.9 volts at idle (idling like crap)
used my oil extractor to create vacuum, managed to get 2.5 volts
- tested fuel pressure. 29PSI at the test port
- Fuel pressure regulator looks rusty, but pressure checks out
The one thing I did notice, a connector for what I believe to be the oil pressure switch has corroded away.
I believe there are 3 sensors on that side of the motor:
-oil pressure sender (for the gauge, which works)
-oil pressure switch (which I believe is not connected) which I believe looked like
http://www.iboats.com/mall/image/view/7/9/9-57990_2.jpg
-Knock sensor
all the symptoms for a disconnected oil pressure switch that I could find were to do with the alarm, and cutting out above a certain RPM, nothing I could find suggested that it might cause the motor to run rich.
I am not at the boat right now, so I cannot verify for 100% certain that it is the oil pressure switch that is disconnected.
Am I missing anything?
anything that might be causing the motor to run so rich?
While it's idling, there is fuel pooling up on the butterfly valves. If I disconnect the fuel injectors, the motor actually runs better for about 6 seconds before it dies.
The spray coming out of the injectors looks good, but there is just too much fuel.
My initial thought was a faulty sensor, but the main fuel controlling sensors all seem to check out.
Ran fine 2 years ago. (has not run in 2 years)
Went to wake the motor up.
New plugs
New fuel filter
Had been flogged so I expected it to be a little rough getting it started up.
Engine is running very rich. Black smoke, barely idling.
- added fresh fuel to the tank
- dumped the fuel from the filter into a glass jar. Looks good
- tested TPS: center-tap 0.6 to 5.0 volts (0-100% throttle)
- tested coolant temp sensor: 930 ohms with the engine "warm" and 1400 ohms after it had cooled down some
- tested the map sensor
no obstructions / no leaks
5.0 volts with engine off
only drops down to 3.9 volts at idle (idling like crap)
used my oil extractor to create vacuum, managed to get 2.5 volts
- tested fuel pressure. 29PSI at the test port
- Fuel pressure regulator looks rusty, but pressure checks out
The one thing I did notice, a connector for what I believe to be the oil pressure switch has corroded away.
I believe there are 3 sensors on that side of the motor:
-oil pressure sender (for the gauge, which works)
-oil pressure switch (which I believe is not connected) which I believe looked like
http://www.iboats.com/mall/image/view/7/9/9-57990_2.jpg
-Knock sensor
all the symptoms for a disconnected oil pressure switch that I could find were to do with the alarm, and cutting out above a certain RPM, nothing I could find suggested that it might cause the motor to run rich.
I am not at the boat right now, so I cannot verify for 100% certain that it is the oil pressure switch that is disconnected.
Am I missing anything?
anything that might be causing the motor to run so rich?
While it's idling, there is fuel pooling up on the butterfly valves. If I disconnect the fuel injectors, the motor actually runs better for about 6 seconds before it dies.
The spray coming out of the injectors looks good, but there is just too much fuel.
My initial thought was a faulty sensor, but the main fuel controlling sensors all seem to check out.