Date: Tue, 24 Jul 2007 08:14:01 -0500
Reply-To: Jeff Lincoln <magikvw@GMAIL.COM>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Jeff Lincoln <magikvw@GMAIL.COM>
Subject: Re: Help Needed, On the Road
In-Reply-To: <012d01c7cdb5$1d7f86e0$6401a8c0@TOSHIBALAP>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
If you do end up replacing that blue Temp 2 sensor please be sure you have
the proper o ring to go on the new sensor. The first time I did this I
bought sokme generic ones from my Flapps - well they didn't seal well at all
and I lost more coolant thatn I wanted too while I removed the old one from
the old sensor. Didn't really hurt anything but it made a mess and I had to
"burp" the system.
On 7/24/07, Scott Daniel - Shazam <scottdaniel@turbovans.com> wrote:
>
> Hi.
> Just a couple of thoughts to offer right now.
> One, the blue connector at the thermostat housing.....
> That's the temp sensor input to the computer.
> It's critical that it get a good connection there.
> I would suggest pulling that plug and see if there is any corrosion on the
> contact, either the plug or the sensor. I have seldom ever found a faulty
> sensor, but I have for sure seen green corrosion at that spot a few times.
> The 'real repair' in that case is a new sensor. Coolant comes out of
> course
> to remove that sensor. Be careful with the plastic thermostat housing -
> they get brittle, then can break, and do sometimes. Not badly so, but
> something to be aware of.
> Also, the wires going into the plug - they should be fine.....
> But that connection is critical - it can't run without a good signal to
> the
> ecu from that temp sensor.
>
> Two....if you ever have the engine flame out in steady flight, and while
> it's still in gear....
> Say you left it in 4th and it was loosing speed......but at we'll say 40
> in
> 4th, and in gear, the engine is doing ....maybe 1,800 rpm.
> If the tach is at zero when you KNOW the engine is in gear and turning at
> some rpm , and the key is still on ( it better be, never turn it off while
> moving ......tho to be fully accurate, you can turn it to off while
> moving,
> just don't pull it out at all !! you'll loose steering control, the single
> most critical system, more so than brakes even ) ......... that's an
> indication that the ignition has quit, because the tach is driven by the
> ignition system. I consider that pretty unlikely, but need to consider
> all
> possibilities of course. It could even been a cat with loose parts inside
> intermediately blocking exhaust flow. ( I don't think people consider the
> exhaust system enough for low power, flaming out, etc. ) ....
>
> . Air Flow Meters in general are a weak link because it is where something
> mechanical meets something electrical....always a potential weak area -
> the
> electronics are usually extremely reliable - they get in trouble where
> then
> encounter a mechanical interface.
>
> Scott
> www.turbovans.com
> Medford/Ashland, Southern OR.
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Vanagon Mailing List [mailto:vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com] On Behalf Of
> mad madeline
> Sent: Monday, July 23, 2007 10:13 PM
> To: vanagon@GERRY.VANAGON.COM
> Subject: Help Needed, On the Road
>
> We launched a trip from Phoenix to No. Calif.
> At 450 miles into the trip our 87 engine, that has been running really
> good for the last 3K miles, began to stumble. We've been using Chevron
> all
> along the way, the problem started 100 miles after a fill up with Chevron.
> Talked to our mechanic... but not being at the shop we haven't come up
> with
> an answer.
>
> The symptoms are that it feels like it is cutting out intermittently. We
> don't know if its ignition or fuel. At first the cutting out was radical
> and we hardly made to our destination. Then at our mechanic's advice, we
> checked the blue plug connecton that goes to the thermostat housing and
> wiggled the spark plug wires to see if they were loose... this may have
> helped it some... not sure, but afterward it seemed to not be as radical.
> We
> can actually drive it at high speed now and it cuts out only once in
> awhile.
> Doesn't seem like it will die and we'll get there, just a bit obnoxious!
>
> Sometimes it caughs several times, sometimes only once. The tach drops
> each time, but not all the way to 0. The fuel pump does not sound
> loud. We
> had a new ox sys 2K ago and everything else was replaced within the last
> 3K. We don't find it related to hills or high temp or low. No
> overheating
> issues. No head leaking.
>
> We are in Carpenteria right now. Tomorrow heading up 101 toward SLO and
> then San Jose. Any ideas would be much appreciated... or a shop along the
> way that would pay to stop at. I don't look forward to this for another
> two
> thousand miles. Mad Madeline
>
>
> ---------------------------------
> Yahoo! oneSearch: Finally, mobile search that gives answers, not web
> links.
>
--
Thanks,
Jeff
90' Carat (It's Blue, It's Beautiful. Now sporting a very unstylish brown
interior taken from the parts bus)
86' (We call this one Parts)
85' GL (Sidelined and feeling neglected)
|