Vanagon EuroVan
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Date:         Tue, 12 Oct 1999 22:54:44 -0700
Reply-To:     Randolph Feuerriegel <RFeuerriegel@BC.SYMPATICO.CA>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Randolph Feuerriegel <RFeuerriegel@BC.SYMPATICO.CA>
Subject:      Re: Eurospec problem
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Hi Grant

I don't know if this helps or not, but I find that I have hot start problems if the van sits longer than 15 min. The 2.0 Audi requires a fair bit of fuel pressure and the stock vanagon pump I am using may be suspect. I don't think it has a check valve in it, but Jetta's etc do. I am thinking about changing fuel pumps. One difference though is that my FI is CIS-E and yours I believe is pulsed. My poor starts do clear up rather quickly once enough fuel is getting thru. I had never considered an electrical problem, but that also a possiblity for my setup. As you say, there is alot of heat in that engine bay. Good luck.

Grant Holst wrote: > > I need the wisdom of the List. I have a Eurospec kit > in my '85 GL. On hot days the engine will not start > back up after sitting for a few minutes. It needs to > cool down almost completely before it will start. > It tries to start but sounds like it is running > on 1 or 2 cyls. I use to have a hot start problem > before where the engine would just spin and I had > no ignition at all. It turned out to be a bad power supply > relay,( I thought) the one that supplies 12v to the ecu. The relay > would heat up and not work. I moved the box that housed > the relay to a cooler spot and that seemed to work for awhile. > When the engine wouldn't start or ran on 1 or 2 cyls. I would > swap out the warm relay for a cool relay and the engine would > run fine. Since the relay was still getting too warm it seemed, > I moved the relay box and ecu under the rear seat. I figured > this had to fix the problem since the relay was no longer > in a hot spot. Well, it didn't fix the problem. So now > I think the problem is in the wire that runs from the terminal > in the back of the van(in the black box that has the picture > of vacuum lines on the cover) to the dash/fuse block and back to the > relay. > This wire is about 18ga. and about 20 feet long. I think > this wire has too much voltage drop for the new ecu which > was designed for a jetta engine (shorter wires, since everything > is up front). Does anyone know why this wire needs to run to the fuse > block? Bentley doesn't show a fuse in this wire. > > Any thoughts on this or what else might be causing the problem? > I never had a problem like this with the old 1.9l. > > Grant Holst > Sunnyvale, CA.

-- R.Feuerriegel 88 syncro


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