Date: Sat, 22 Jul 2006 09:54:40 -0400
Reply-To: Kenneth Wilford <kenwilfy@COMCAST.NET>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Kenneth Wilford <kenwilfy@COMCAST.NET>
Subject: Re: Temp 2 Sensor
In-Reply-To: <44C1A8B0.8040907@cybertrails.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
If you have a short piece of wire you can bridge the two connectors in the
temp II plug and this will allow the van to run well. It will run a little
crappy and you will have to hold your foot on the pedal when it is cold but
once it warms up (just a few minutes) it will run like normal. I was taught
this by Darrel Boehler on a trip a couple of years ago. Worked like a charm
in my 89 Wolfsburg. You have to be careful in the 1.9l Vanagons though. I
have found that many of them have a problem that seems like faulty temp II
but it is actually the wire going from the computer to the Temp II that has
become faulty. It gets a high resistance and then no matter how many
sensors you put in, the van will still not start when hot, run rich when
warm. Also a faulty or non-existant ground strap to the engine can cause a
high resistance reading. Checking these with an Ohm meter takes a Bentley
manual and about five minutes of time. People think I am a miracle worker
when I can diagnose their van after everyone else has given up on it. I
tell all my customers that I have a better survival rate than any doctor. I
have never lost a patient! :-) 95% of the time they could have diagnosed
it themselves with a little patience, a Bentley and an Ohm meter, but don't
tell them that :-)
Thanks,
Ken Wilford
John 3:16
http://www.vanagain.com
http://www.strictlyvwauctions.com
http://www.eurovan.org
http://www.vwcabrio.org
Phone: (856)-327-4936
Fax: (856)-327-2242
-----Original Message-----
From: Vanagon Mailing List [mailto:vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com] On Behalf Of
Geo & Kathleen Hahn
Sent: Saturday, July 22, 2006 12:25 AM
To: vanagon@GERRY.VANAGON.COM
Subject: Temp 2 Sensor
John Lane wrote:
>This is possibly a Temp 2 sensor issue..if the sensor goes bad it tells
>the puter it's cold (engine) and adjusts the mixture accordingly...when
>it's hot, it basically floods the engine.
>
>
Assuming I do not carry a spare temp-2 and I have this failure far from
home... would one of these be the correct work-around to get a hot engine to
start and not run rich:
1) Disconnect the Temp-2 sensor?
or
2) Disconnect and connect the 2 leads (are there 2 leads?) together?
or
3) Disconnect and ground the 1 lead (is there just 1 lead?)?
or
4) Other or no work-around?
Geo
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