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Date:         Sat, 22 Aug 2009 22:16:34 -0500
Reply-To:     Max Wellhouse <dimwittedmoose@CFU.NET>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Max Wellhouse <dimwittedmoose@CFU.NET>
Subject:      Re: Friday question.Re: Vacuum gauge NVC
Comments: To: Ken Lewis <kdlewis@NORTHSTATE.NET>
In-Reply-To:  <004001ca22df$e00cb120$0201a8c0@korky2>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed

Ken: I have had a VDO Vacuum gauge attached to my 79 loaf and my Vanagon motors and can speak to what normal is for a Vanagon. The Vanagon of mine normally idles when warm at 15" of Hg and non full shut down of the throttle going down a steep hill will generate about 22-23". Can't quite get the gauge to get to zero under full throttle, but that could be an age thig with the gauge. I've had it on like my last 3 cars. Not only is a vacuum gauge to me more important than looking at voltage or amperage, but it also helps me minimize pressure on the throttle for climbing hills and saving some fuel maybe.

My 79 loaf engine had dual two barrel Webers on it with individual intakes obviously and I tried running the brake booster off one runner and the vacuum gauge off the other and I still got stable idle readings, al;though not as stable as the Vanagon. I attributed that to the 3/4 Ray Litz camshaft in there which will not make for the smoothest idle or vac. readings. tying the 3/4 side runners together made no difference in gauge reading or idle, so I went back to segregating the ports.

According to the Haynes manual for our Toyota, a slow wide range of drop like the 0-20 you speak of is either clogged PVC(which you likely don't have), or incorrect idle fuel mixture, or a throttle body or intake gasket leak.

YMMV

DM&FS

At 11:20 PM 8/21/2009, Ken Lewis wrote: > I have searched the internet but can not find the answer. All web sites >state a "normal" engine's vacuum, at idle, is ~ 17 to 21 inches at the >intake manifold. But, all these examples are for cars with one manifold >connected to at least four cylinders. I am trying to diagnose a flat four >with four venturis and individual intake manifolds. When I attach the >vacuum gauge under a single venturi it produces rapid swings from zero to >20. Do I need to connect all test ports together to smooth these readings >out or is this the problem? >TIA >Ken


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