Date: Fri, 23 May 2008 05:04:20 -0400
Reply-To: Poppie Jagersand <poppie.jagersand@YAHOO.CA>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Poppie Jagersand <poppie.jagersand@YAHOO.CA>
Subject: Re: Trouble with '85 1.9l wasserboxer in Europe
In-Reply-To: <c280e73b0805221147q25bc462eg68793586a35732bc@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
Thanks to all for many tips.
This morning I took off and measured the ECU wiring harness
according to Bentley. All checks out ok.
Also tested O2 sensor with a sigital multimeter. When running it
averages about 20mV. It varies from 10-30mV going up on acceleration
and deacceleration, then stabilizes on fixed RPMs.
The low voltage was surprising to me. The only other gas engine I
worked on (a Mitsubishi I4 2.6) I recall had O2 voltage at about 0.7 to 1V.
Nevertheless the O2 seems to be unlikely to cause the big stumbling
problem. I tried iwth it disconeccted an no change.
For the basics: Spark plugs and wires were just changed before the trip.
Distributor cap looked OK, but maybe I should replace that also.
I have no means to check timing.
Someone mentioned the hall sender in the distributor. I will look
into that. The Bentley test is that it should measure Battery voltage minus
1.5 V. Mine was lower than that. Anothet tip was a rpm limiter/timing advance
control box in the front right of the engine compartment. I thought that
asvance was mechanical as usual, so only checked the vaccum lines
Are there electrical connections for this as well?
Today it ran a bit better already in the morning. We were able to drive
back from France to Saarbruecken. I tried filling with different gas
a couple of times, and maybe this is just my imagination, buit it
seems like it runs worse after some fillings and better after some.
I also tried valve and injector cleaner additatives. Not sure if it
was this that helped or not.
I will change the fuel filter just in case as suggested. Though when it
runs it will run strongly so I was assuming it was getting enough fuel.
Another fuel delivery related device mentioned in Bentley is a fuel
pressure regulator. I was not sure how to test this. I have no pressure
tester. The van has had an aftermarket fuel pump for 3000 miles
(This is a US model and VW didīnot sell these here.)
I will also check out mechanics through Thomas Koch.
Though just at the moment the engine runs right again, so it
will be hard to explain the problem. (with bas luck it will come
back tommorrow Sat when the mechs are closed.)
Thanks again,
Martin
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