Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

So in my quest to find my cold start issues with the car, as described here

http://www.skylinesaustralia.com/forums/in...howtopic=160180

I did the following test.

I put a fuel pressure gauge in and tested the fuel leakage and so forth.

Basically if left alone the fuel pressure eventually bleeds off to 14.5 psi, over the night, which is to spec, I need to find the correct page again to give details. So then I pressurized the system and blocked off supply and return. The reading was 40psi, after and hour still 40 psi, after 2 hours 39 psi, but this was at night 11:30pm to be exact. Then over night the pressure dropped of to 20psi or so.

However I was told that the pressure loss is worked out over 30 minutes, so if there is no substantial pressure loss the system is ok. THIS IS TAKEN FORM A MECHANIC THAT WORKS ON FUEL DELIVERY SYSTEMS. CAN SOMONE CONFIRM.

Does this mean the injectros are leaking badly? or something?

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/160605-testing-for-a-leaking-fuel-injector/
Share on other sites

If it's worked out over a half an hour period, and from one point to the next, which is an hour apart, the reading is fine, since 40PSi at A is equal to 40PSi at B.

That would be my thoughts.

Wouldn't it work for you to unplug the injectors out of the motor, pull the whole fuel rail out, have injectors plugged into the fuel rail and into the loom, sitting it over a bucket, prime the fuel system up, and just leave them to sit and see if you have petrol in the bucket at the end? (I'd also put a rag over the top of the injectors and bucket to help avoid the fuel from evaporating.

A mate of mine used to have a spare manifold where he would sit it on top of a piece of paper.

The reason for the manifold is that the injectors will not sit in the rail when pressurised, they require the manifold to be held in.

He ran a long piece of hose from the car to the manifold/fuel rail/injectors sitting on the ground, pressurised it all up and then let it sit overnight. Check the paper in the morning and its obvious if any fuel has dribbled out the injectors.

His would hold pressure fine as yours do but overnight we could see fuel had leaked from the injector. Unsure if this is normal, we assumed not.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Depending on how long the car sat it is very possible for injectors to be stuck open or closed, I'd get them cleaned and flow tested. Other than that, obviously when the loom changes and the car doesn't start any more....the loom is suspect so some tracing / comparing may be required
    • Harness is for a s1 Rb25det, and it is engine and lower harness.  the old harness had broken off plugs and was in very rough condition/exposed wires and splices etc. it is not able to be put back on the car, I could visually inspect to see if they had rewired any pins on the ecu plug. The fuel pump definitly isn’t turning off it’s an external pump and very loud you can hear it. Will look at the other harness tonight, am also going to pull the fuel rail and watch the injectors spray, will update here with what I find. Pretty sure at this point it has to be something to do with injectors because car will fire up on starting fluid and cas is clicking the Injectors. Fuel pressure is steady 43psi 
    • Check the injectors flow evenly, and are actually flowing what you and the ECU think they should be flowing. If it's starting up on starter fluid, you have a fuel issue. Is it possible under cranking your fuel pump is turning off?   The harness you replaced, is that the whole engine harness? Do yourself a test, and drop the old harness on and plug it into the Z32 ECU. It's possible they've wired things different. From memory S1 to S2 is different in RB25 and you may have a wrong loom
    • I haven’t pulled the injectors to watch them spray yet but they are clicking from the cas and all of the spark plugs are wet with fuel. I’ve thought the cylinders were being flooded from the beginning and was hoping fuel pressure would fix it. Tonight I am going to pull the rail and watch the injectors spray. Don’t know how to test/diagnose if the plugs are firing in correct sequence but that should be a timing thing and as far as timing goes my car still has the half moon for the cas can only install it 1 way. And my mechanical timing is 100% correct I posted photos above. Confirmed with the balancer on and off. 
×
×
  • Create New...