Date: Mon, 8 Sep 2003 17:29:53 -0700
Reply-To: Tom Young <tomyoung1@COMCAST.NET>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Tom Young <tomyoung1@COMCAST.NET>
Subject: Re: Fuel air mixture or timing adjustment?
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
----- Original Message -----
From: "Craig Oda" <craigoda@COMMUNITYBUILDERS.INFO>
To: <vanagon@GERRY.VANAGON.COM>
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2003 4:10 PM
Subject: Fuel air mixture or timing adjustment?
> I heard from Karen Davis that her problem with high HC in her CA SMOG
> test was solved at BusLabs with a timing adjustment. Since her problem
> symptoms were similar to mine, I would like to try and adjust the timing
> or at least check the timing on my 1.9L waterboxer.
>
> How can I try this myself? Is this documented in the Bentley manual?
> Please advise.
Assuming you have and know how to use a timing light, then checking the
timing is not difficult. On my air-cooled Vanagon with factory electronic
ignition I have to disconnect the two plugs to the idle stabilizer and
connect the two plugs together before checking timing. I'm not sure about
the water-cooled Vanagons but I think the early waterboxers have the same
setup. The Bentley should explain the process.
> Damon Campbell said that BusLabs adjusted the fuel air mixture of his
> 2.3L waterboxer. Before the adjustment, the symptoms were similar to
> mine. I would like to try and adjust my fuel-air mixture too. How can
> I do this?
This is best done at a shop with an exhaust gas analyzer, assuming they
insert the probe *in front* of the catalytic converter, not up the tailpipe.
However, if you have a voltmeter and a good O2 sensor you can do a fairly
accurate adjustment as follows:
1)Drive vehicle to get everything completely warmed up.
2)Stop engine, disconnect the signal wire from the O2 sensor (don't know if
you have a 3-wire or 1-wire O2 sensor in those things) and connect the
voltmeter to the O2 sensor and ground.
3)Start engine and watch O2 sensor output on voltmeter. A "correct" reading
is a rapid fluctuation above and below .5 volts. (A graph of the voltage
output vs. air/fuel mixture is roughly "S" shaped with the center of the
"S", corresponding to about .5 volts, being *very* steep.) A reading
consistently above .5 volts indicates "too rich" and a reading consistently
below .5 volts indicates "too lean."
4)Adjust air bypass on AFM until correct reading is obtained.
---------------------------------------------------------------
Tom Young '81 Vanagon
Lafayette, CA 94549 '82 Westfalia
---------------------------------------------------------------