Astro 4.3 VinZ fuel cutout/stall problem
Posted: Fri Aug 21, 2009 12:48 pm
Good morning all,
I was working on a problem in another forum and Smalley recommended I come here. Here is the story:
I hope you can help. #-o
The vehicle is a 91 chevy astro 4.3L with 100k+ miles
About 2 or 3 weeks ago, very occasionally at first, the engine would suddenly die. There was no warning , no sputtering, no hesitation, it would usually just die. But it would start right back up and run fine afterwards.
As time progressed, the problem became more frequent, and sometimes you’d have to grind a bit to get it restarted.
Yesterday it died on my wife and is now very hard to start and will only run a few minutes if you’re lucky.
Last night I pulled off the air cleaner and junk so I could see the throttle-body injectors. When it’s running they appear to be firing fine, then suddenly they’ll just stop firing and the engine, of course, dies.
I started by replacing the fuel-pump relay, which seemed improbable but was easy and cheap.
Next I replaced the fuel filter.
Then finally I installed a fuel pressure regulator diaphragm kit. I really thought that would be the one that
would do it – but no soap.
We had the fuel pump replaced about 2 years ago – supposedly with an oem (they certainly charged us for an oem) so I haven’t been looking in that direction.
But just in case I decided to check it. I didn't have the adaptor to go inline so I had to check it head-in. It came it at right at 13psi - so that part looks good.
I hooked up an analog volt meter to one of the injectors hoping to see if the signal to the injector was dropping out.
I expected to see a pulsating voltage across the two injector leads but instead I saw almost no voltage - even when it was running "properly".
So I measured each lead to ground - both running and not.
In both cases I saw 12 V when running. As/after it dies (cant tell which) it drops to about 11.5 then drifts up to 12.5.
I tried putting a timing light on a plug wire and on the coil wire to see if the ignition module was firing when it wasn't running. With an inductive timing light on the coil wire, I cranked it and it had trouble starting but the coil was definitely firing. It's possible that it was firing weakly and/or missing part of the time as after it started, the light was more continuous and brighter.
I took the igintion module out and took it in to Advanced Auto and had them test it. They tested it 6 times and it came up good every time.
I jumped on JustAsk to get an idea where to go next. The justask guy had me spray carb cleaner down the throttle body while it was not starting. I should have thought of that. In any case it fired so the problem is still on the fuel side...
The problem is pretty intermittant. Sometimes you can barely get it started and barely keep it running, other times - like when you're trying to check something - you can hardly get it to die and when it does it starts right back up. It can happen when the engine is stone cold, or running warm - although I've had a little better success at getting it to be hard-starting when it is cold.
Any help you can give will be greatly appreciated. I am not finished with the justask guy so he might have an idea as well. I'll post the solution once I find it
PS
A side note on the fuel pressure regulator diaphragm kit. When I was installing it I saw something that looked strange to me. I have never had that area apart before so I don’t really know what normal looks like but let me try to describe what looked odd.
Picture the assembly that the spring and diaphragm fit in. Now flip the whole assembly over. At the bottom of the bowl there is what looks like a port – about half an inch in diamteter, that fits down into a hole in the throttle body.
What I saw was, looking into that port, it looked like a large glob of molten copper (or copper colored metal) was plugging the port from the inside of the bowl. It didn’t look machined, it had about the same appearance of if you took a large glob of molten solder and dropped it into water – roundish and rough.
Since there is a slot in the side of the bottom part of that bowl that a tab comes through – I think to lock the pressure adjust screw in place – it doesn’t seem like any gas would be going into that part of the bowl. So it doesn’t seem like the glob would matter. But I thought I’d mention it.
Thanks for your help!
I was working on a problem in another forum and Smalley recommended I come here. Here is the story:
I hope you can help. #-o
The vehicle is a 91 chevy astro 4.3L with 100k+ miles
About 2 or 3 weeks ago, very occasionally at first, the engine would suddenly die. There was no warning , no sputtering, no hesitation, it would usually just die. But it would start right back up and run fine afterwards.
As time progressed, the problem became more frequent, and sometimes you’d have to grind a bit to get it restarted.
Yesterday it died on my wife and is now very hard to start and will only run a few minutes if you’re lucky.
Last night I pulled off the air cleaner and junk so I could see the throttle-body injectors. When it’s running they appear to be firing fine, then suddenly they’ll just stop firing and the engine, of course, dies.
I started by replacing the fuel-pump relay, which seemed improbable but was easy and cheap.
Next I replaced the fuel filter.
Then finally I installed a fuel pressure regulator diaphragm kit. I really thought that would be the one that
would do it – but no soap.
We had the fuel pump replaced about 2 years ago – supposedly with an oem (they certainly charged us for an oem) so I haven’t been looking in that direction.
But just in case I decided to check it. I didn't have the adaptor to go inline so I had to check it head-in. It came it at right at 13psi - so that part looks good.
I hooked up an analog volt meter to one of the injectors hoping to see if the signal to the injector was dropping out.
I expected to see a pulsating voltage across the two injector leads but instead I saw almost no voltage - even when it was running "properly".
So I measured each lead to ground - both running and not.
In both cases I saw 12 V when running. As/after it dies (cant tell which) it drops to about 11.5 then drifts up to 12.5.
I tried putting a timing light on a plug wire and on the coil wire to see if the ignition module was firing when it wasn't running. With an inductive timing light on the coil wire, I cranked it and it had trouble starting but the coil was definitely firing. It's possible that it was firing weakly and/or missing part of the time as after it started, the light was more continuous and brighter.
I took the igintion module out and took it in to Advanced Auto and had them test it. They tested it 6 times and it came up good every time.
I jumped on JustAsk to get an idea where to go next. The justask guy had me spray carb cleaner down the throttle body while it was not starting. I should have thought of that. In any case it fired so the problem is still on the fuel side...
The problem is pretty intermittant. Sometimes you can barely get it started and barely keep it running, other times - like when you're trying to check something - you can hardly get it to die and when it does it starts right back up. It can happen when the engine is stone cold, or running warm - although I've had a little better success at getting it to be hard-starting when it is cold.
Any help you can give will be greatly appreciated. I am not finished with the justask guy so he might have an idea as well. I'll post the solution once I find it
PS
A side note on the fuel pressure regulator diaphragm kit. When I was installing it I saw something that looked strange to me. I have never had that area apart before so I don’t really know what normal looks like but let me try to describe what looked odd.
Picture the assembly that the spring and diaphragm fit in. Now flip the whole assembly over. At the bottom of the bowl there is what looks like a port – about half an inch in diamteter, that fits down into a hole in the throttle body.
What I saw was, looking into that port, it looked like a large glob of molten copper (or copper colored metal) was plugging the port from the inside of the bowl. It didn’t look machined, it had about the same appearance of if you took a large glob of molten solder and dropped it into water – roundish and rough.
Since there is a slot in the side of the bottom part of that bowl that a tab comes through – I think to lock the pressure adjust screw in place – it doesn’t seem like any gas would be going into that part of the bowl. So it doesn’t seem like the glob would matter. But I thought I’d mention it.
Thanks for your help!