Bogging and sputtering when cold
#1
Bogging and sputtering when cold
So as the weather has been warming up here into the 70s, I've noticed that my car won't idle smooth when cold and occasionally stumbles or sputters like it's about to run out of gas when taking off. Upon cold startup, the idle keeps dipping down to 700 when it should hold steady around 850-900. As I drive off, it will fall to 500 RPM every time I press the clutch pedal while coasting and sometimes if I'm approaching a stop it will also bog and sputter at around 300 RPM like it doesn't have the power to pull from a dead stop. By this time the engine temp is usually 170F. I then usually have to rev it a bit and it recovers. All of this disappears by the time the engine has fully warmed up.
IDK if this is related but the car has always surged a bit in 2nd and 3rd gear at part throttle between 1200-1400 rpm. It's a gentle jerking motion, kinda like a novice driver letting the clutch out too fast.
The car is stock except for a lid. Recently got a tune-up. New NGK TR5IX plugs, MSD 8.5mm wires, throttle body was cleaned, MAF was cleaned, K&N filter is clean, and new Denso O2s. Scanned the PCM, no DTCs set either. I did a fuel pressure test and that looked good too. 55 psi key on and held steady key off. 60 psi going down the road. I was hoping to monitor the fuel pressure during one of the bog and sputter episodes but it didn't happen today, probably because it was a little colder. I also scanned it yesterday using the OBDlink app and O2 sensor activity looked good, even during the uneven idle.
What else should I be looking at? IAC valve? Despite the tune-up, fuel economy is total **** too. 17 mpg with 50/50 highway and city driving.
IDK if this is related but the car has always surged a bit in 2nd and 3rd gear at part throttle between 1200-1400 rpm. It's a gentle jerking motion, kinda like a novice driver letting the clutch out too fast.
The car is stock except for a lid. Recently got a tune-up. New NGK TR5IX plugs, MSD 8.5mm wires, throttle body was cleaned, MAF was cleaned, K&N filter is clean, and new Denso O2s. Scanned the PCM, no DTCs set either. I did a fuel pressure test and that looked good too. 55 psi key on and held steady key off. 60 psi going down the road. I was hoping to monitor the fuel pressure during one of the bog and sputter episodes but it didn't happen today, probably because it was a little colder. I also scanned it yesterday using the OBDlink app and O2 sensor activity looked good, even during the uneven idle.
What else should I be looking at? IAC valve? Despite the tune-up, fuel economy is total **** too. 17 mpg with 50/50 highway and city driving.
Last edited by Jeep_junkie; 03-19-2017 at 01:48 AM.
#2
What do the fuel trims look like? When is the last time the intake bolts were torqued? Sounds like a vacuum leak, the computer can't adjust the cold mixture. Another issue can be rusted fuel lines inside the lines clogging the injector screens. This will cause the symtoms you describe.
#3
The intake bolts were loose when I got the car again few months ago so I tightened then up. I'll pull the injectors out and check for debris in the screens. I didn't check the fuel trims this time but they looked good when I installed the new O2s. 2% and 5% IIRC. I'll check again today.
#5
The filter isn't over oiled or dirty. I did clean the MAF too. It had been soiled from blow by coming through the throttle body. Cleaned out the catch can and it's been nice and dry since.
#6
Well, I haven't had a chance to log any driving yet, but it hasn't acted up again since. I did however monitor fuel pressure under wide open throttle and it dipped to 50 PSI during WOT and down 45 PSI coasting to a stop. Also, I misread the gauge earlier, it actually reaches a max of 60 PSI with the motor running. Will edit the original post to reflect this.
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#8
So I checked pressure as per the FSM. It dropped nearly 10 PSI in 10 minutes with the key off. Definitely leaking fuel somewhere. Now to figure out if it's the injectors or something at the other end.
#9
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Only a month or so back. No leaks in the pcv system. The valve works as it should.
The filter isn't over oiled or dirty. I did clean the MAF too. It had been soiled from blow by coming through the throttle body. Cleaned out the catch can and it's been nice and dry since.
The filter isn't over oiled or dirty. I did clean the MAF too. It had been soiled from blow by coming through the throttle body. Cleaned out the catch can and it's been nice and dry since.
So, you're telling me, the foreward most point on your intake system is being fouled because at some point in your engines run cycle it is blowing oil out of the cylinders, that oil is escaping the suction stoke of the valve, overcoming all of that negative pressure, going past your throttle body, and oiling your mass air flow sensor?
Your mass air flow sensor is being fouled by air coming in from the intake
#10
So, you're telling me, the foreward most point on your intake system is being fouled because at some point in your engines run cycle it is blowing oil out of the cylinders, that oil is escaping the suction stoke of the valve, overcoming all of that negative pressure, going past your throttle body, and oiling your mass air flow sensor?
Your mass air flow sensor is being fouled by air coming in from the intake
Your mass air flow sensor is being fouled by air coming in from the intake
Last edited by Jeep_junkie; 03-24-2017 at 05:32 PM.
#11
Well after going back to the FSM, everything seems to be pointing at a leaky FPR, which the FSM says requires a whole new in tank assembly. Before I throw expensive parts at it, what else could I do to fix this?
#12
What do the fuel trims look like? When is the last time the intake bolts were torqued? Sounds like a vacuum leak, the computer can't adjust the cold mixture. Another issue can be rusted fuel lines inside the lines clogging the injector screens. This will cause the symtoms you describe.
#13
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I don't do any tuning so I'm not sure about the tables.
It sounds like a cold misfire. I always run copper plugs because the iridium and platinum plugs have a really fine tip and usually result in a loss of torque in midrange power. You did not gap the plugs, correct? Gapping a platinum or iridium can cause a misfire
It sounds like a cold misfire. I always run copper plugs because the iridium and platinum plugs have a really fine tip and usually result in a loss of torque in midrange power. You did not gap the plugs, correct? Gapping a platinum or iridium can cause a misfire
#14
You already posted above your fuel pressure is low....replace the assembly so your fuel pressure is normal and go from there. You can't just guess at things hoping you'll fix it???? I'm not sure what else you want? Of course its going to run all over the place with the fuel assembly needing replacement.
#15
You already posted above your fuel pressure is low....replace the assembly so your fuel pressure is normal and go from there. You can't just guess at things hoping you'll fix it???? I'm not sure what else you want? Of course its going to run all over the place with the fuel assembly needing replacement.
And while we're at it, is there a write up anywhere on disassembling the fuel pump module? I want to replace only those parts of it that are defective. Nothing else.
#16
You replace the entire assembly and if I were you I'd buy a good one if you don't want issues down the road. Now with your attitude its very hard for me to continue to help you. The reason you replace the entire assembly there are too many parts that are worn that need replacing in there. Your fuel pressure is low, the check valve is leaking, the regulator is probably toasted. These fuel assembles are submerged in fuel 24/7 how long do you think they last? There is a sponsor that sells all the parts but with your limited experience you may make more trouble than you have already. Good luck
#17
You replace the entire assembly and if I were you I'd buy a good one if you don't want issues down the road. Now with your attitude its very hard for me to continue to help you. The reason you replace the entire assembly there are too many parts that are worn that need replacing in there. Your fuel pressure is low, the check valve is leaking, the regulator is probably toasted. These fuel assembles are submerged in fuel 24/7 how long do you think they last? There is a sponsor that sells all the parts but with your limited experience you may make more trouble than you have already. Good luck
Now would somebody please have a look at this log I posted?
#18
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Fuel pressure test results seemed good. Fuel pump complete assembly for a 99-02 plastic tank is around $100, for my 98 it's more like $368. Fuel pump failure would have much more severe symptoms, it wouldn't just be at a particular rpm it would be a constant issue.
I'm looking at your table and your tps% are really sporadic. Line 466 on your table seems strange, you're getting a high flow reading from the mass air flow sensor, low Flow reading from the map sensor, and a zero value from the tps.
So you have a possible vacuum leak, a slow mass air flow sensor, or a bad throttle position sensor. Your readings on the Tps never show over 70%
I mean I can look at the table but there's nothing to compare it to. Unless you took your buddies car with the same mods on the same drive for the logging there's not much to check the table against
I'm looking at your table and your tps% are really sporadic. Line 466 on your table seems strange, you're getting a high flow reading from the mass air flow sensor, low Flow reading from the map sensor, and a zero value from the tps.
So you have a possible vacuum leak, a slow mass air flow sensor, or a bad throttle position sensor. Your readings on the Tps never show over 70%
I mean I can look at the table but there's nothing to compare it to. Unless you took your buddies car with the same mods on the same drive for the logging there's not much to check the table against
#19
I was driving around town, so I never got the chance to stomp on it. It doesn't have any of the drivability symptoms of a bad TPS.
#20
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Yeah your fuel pressure needs to be a constant 58psi. Amy deviation from that number means the pump is failing.
It's not accurate to tell if the car is running lean by looking at factory oxygen sensor readings. To.view that kind of data you would need a wideband 02 sensor. If we could view the data log and see errors the car would have already triggered a check engine light. So we can already consider those results acceptable, but like I said, the factory 02 sensors are not accurate to determine an air fuel ratio
It's not accurate to tell if the car is running lean by looking at factory oxygen sensor readings. To.view that kind of data you would need a wideband 02 sensor. If we could view the data log and see errors the car would have already triggered a check engine light. So we can already consider those results acceptable, but like I said, the factory 02 sensors are not accurate to determine an air fuel ratio