Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

So I just had my car tuned with 740cc deatchwerks injectors with stock rail and reg and z32 run by a nistune, it is an rb25det neo but with r33 intake and rb20 sensors in an r32 so it has the R33 AAC valve but only with one plug hooked up as that is all the loom has.

Now the car when I first put the injectors in untuned (was tuned for 440cc and different fuel reg) it started instantly, barely one turn of the starter and it fired up and purred like a kitten, no popping, no hunting, perfect 1200rpm idle when cold that slowly lowered to ~700rpm over 5-10 minutes however when hot it was about 600rpm and a bit shit.

During the tune we had to change the kfactor and injector latency a fair bit to get it lean enough up top (got numbers as low as 7 on boost out of a range of 255!!) and this seemed to make the idle quality suffer a bit when hot which was expected. On cold start once again it would start immediately when breathing on the key, come to 1200rpm but be poppy and a bit average but when hot great.

I then had a full dyno tune where we played with the settings further getting everything perfect, after this it would still start great, but then after 3 seconds splutter and stall, restart and after 3 seconds drop to 2-300rpm and you'd kick it, come good, and go on 3 second cycles, splutter splutter, then back to purring at 1200 rpm etc after a few minutes it would idle fine at ~800rpm but poppy and hunt from 700-900 rpm, hot idle was great.

I dealt with this for a week and then it seemingly fixed itself, back to idling at 1200, not a single rpm deviation or pop, if anything the idle was slightly too high, when hot idled perfect.

Another week later back to shit idle again.

I spoke to Pete at nistune (he did the tune) and he doesn't think there are any odd maps it could jump to to cause this, we also copied the warm map to the cold map so they are identical, It sounds like it might be a mechanical problem but the 3 second intervals just seem to random for it to be.

I tried unplugging the O2 sensor incase it was trimming too much/too little but no change, tried unplugging the TPS and no change, I also unplugged the AAC valve and no change, surely one of these should be affecting the cold idle? I know there is a thermostatic valve which is run via coolant temp, but I would have thought the PWM signal for the actual AAC would be active at all times.

What is the next thing to check? I'm guessing it might be the cold start coolant fed part of the AAC which I could try blasting out with compressed air and soaking in petrol over night, but are there any other settings in the ECU or mechanical/electrical things I should check?

Edited by Rolls
Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/401709-weird-idle-problem/
Share on other sites

  • Replies 51
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Give the AAC a good clean out with carby cleaner as a first start, just to make sure it is clean enough to be able to move properly. Get it out of the way.

The cold start valve is powered. That's what heats it up, not coolant so much. It's attached where it soaks up heat from the inlet manifold anyway, but it's the heating element in it that does the job. You could test to see if that's all working properly.

Edited by GTSBoy

There are two plugs on the AAC, one purple one on top and a orangey one pointing straight down, the bottom one is hooked up but nothing happens when I unplug it, the top one my loom doesn't have a plug for.

Does anyone have a wiring diagram or know what the top plug is for? I doubt it is my problem unless some gremlin in my engine bay gives it power randomly depending on the week, but it might be something to look into.

The fact that unplugging the bottom plug made no difference to the idle when cold means that if the cold start heating element is indeed powered it must be powered via this plug, perhaps that is where the wiring issue is, I will meter it out and see that it is getting power.

Unless of course it is purely mechanically actuated via coolant temp, can anyone confirm this?

No....the cold start valve is completely somewhere else. Under the plenum.

The AAC is idle control. Brown plug.

The FICD is Fast Idle Control Device. Purple plug. Not heated - it's a solenoid.

The cold start valve is the one under the plenum. Biggish thing, two fat hoses, one on either side. One electrical connection (two wire).

No....the cold start valve is completely somewhere else. Under the plenum.

The AAC is idle control. Brown plug.

The FICD is Fast Idle Control Device. Purple plug. Not heated - it's a solenoid.

The cold start valve is the one under the plenum. Biggish thing, two fat hoses, one on either side. One electrical connection (two wire).

The neo has the cold start coolant fed part on the aac/iac valve.

EDIT: misread. Didnt realise it had r33 intake

No....the cold start valve is completely somewhere else. Under the plenum.

The AAC is idle control. Brown plug.

The FICD is Fast Idle Control Device. Purple plug. Not heated - it's a solenoid.

The cold start valve is the one under the plenum. Biggish thing, two fat hoses, one on either side. One electrical connection (two wire).

Where abouts under the plenum, near the injectors/under the TB ?

Hmm after wiggling every thing around it seems better, not 100% fixed like it was though, not sure could be a coincidence, are you 100% there is a wire there?

The block is neo and the intake/aac is r33, so I would have used all the r33 stuff and Im pretty sure the air regulator was attached to the intake manifold so that would be r33 as well, can't see any pictures of an electrical plug in the r33 manual either.

It's electric in the R32s......I've seen an R33 one and it looked essentially the same, so I was just assuming it was electric too. If it's not electric, then it really needs to have coolant lines on it, otherwise it ain't gunna get hot enough fast enough.

Just google looked. These things....http://www.google.com.au/search?tbm=isch&hl=en&source=hp&biw=1337&bih=549&q=r33+air+regulator&gbv=2&oq=r33+air+regulator&aq=f&aqi=&aql=&gs_l=img.3...1206.7754.0.8132.17.10.0.7.0.1.321.1619.4j1j4j1.10.0...0.0.xIsTD6DUtIs

(look at the third and 5th hits)

have an electrical connector on the other side.

Edited by GTSBoy

See mine looks identical to that but I've felt all around it and can't feel where any plug would go on, there are no spare loom connectors down there either, nor is there one in the manual.

Maybe I need to get under the car to see it, can anyone confirm it definitely does have a plug?

The weather has been through some sizable temperature swings lately. Frigidly cold in the middle of May, warmer late May....back to pretty cold just lately. Could be as simple as that. Couple it with changes you've made to the tune across that time, and anybody's guess is as good as mine!

Well it went from bad to good to bad after the final tune, and was also good before the first tune, so it is possibly temperature related but I am quite confident the two periods where it idled well were hot and cold, definitely a possible scenario though.

I'm thinking this is two seperate issues, a vac leak causing the popping on idle etc, and then the cold start valve obviously not being plugged in, tomorrows cold start test will be interesting anyway.

Thanks for the help so far.

Ok made absolutely no difference with it plugged in or not, I tried unplugging the TPS, AAC, O2 sensor and none of them effected the idle at all.

I held the revs at 1500 and it started to hunt between 900 then back up to 1500 then back down and pop and fart, got a lot better after a few minutes and when warm it went away, this says to me it isn't an idle problem, I can even feel it missing when cruising at 60 in 5th then come good then miss again, goes away when warm.

I am starting to think I have a misfire or an injector not firing properly when cold, unsure how to diagnose this further though?

I will put the consult cable back in and check the timing isn't shifting due to say a stuffed CAS or something as well.

edit: Brand new plugs as of 500km ago 0.8mm gap with 6 heat range.

Edited by Rolls

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

    • Not too sure just yet, want to have a go at doing what I can myself, but to start with want someone to cast their eye over it tell me what needs doing to get it running and back on the road, so anyone with great overall knowledge would be ideal.
    • I personally would go with cutting out the rubber. Then deal with getting sleeve off separately. Rubber can be painful to cut, it loves to jam up cutting tools. I normally have success with drill bits, deburr bits, angle grinders, jigsaw, reciprocating saw, and never forget... fire. Obviously different tools won't work in all locations you're trying to work with, and you need to be comfortable with each. You personally may be happy slowly slicing it out with a razor blade, if you are, go for it with one too! Feel free to wait for others to weigh in also on their thoughts.
    • So ... I got everything disconnected and started dropping the frame. Three of the four mounts started to come down but the fourth one (the one with the nut that gave me all the trouble) won't budge. The inner metal sleeve stays up tight against the chassis rail although the outer part of the mount drops a bit (and can be levered quite a lot more) but it's just stretching the rubber bushing. So I reckon there's some serious corrosion inside the inner sleeve and holding it tight to the lug at the top of the bolt. Tried everything I can think of so far: penetrating oil, whacking the top of the sleeve to vibrate it and wedge a screwdriver blade in there. I also tried to turn the inner sleeve a bit by hitting it with a chisel at the bottom. It's stuck solid. What do you think about cutting the rubber with a blade so I can drop the subframe around it anyway. Then worry about getting the inner sleeve off after? Will that work? Is it gonna give me even more problems?
    • Steam valve seals are usually responsible for cold start smoke, it goes away once engine warmed up. Disconnect it let engine breathers and let it breath freely, see if problem goes away after a short drive. Also check to make sure engine oil drain pipe is not blocked or kinked. 
    • Haha thanks! Yea I'm moving over from 2x 1000cc jets pre throttle over to 6x 190cc direct port jets and 1x 500cc pre throttle jet.  Direct port comes with all the advantages you would expect, except that pre throttle does cool down IAT'S more. That's why my direct port nozzle placement is closest to the plenum as possible in the runners to allow the air more time to cool before being sucked in. I'm also putting that one 500cc pre throttle jet to help with more cooling. It's a hybrid system. There's a lot more advantages to moving over to a PWM solenoid with a constant pressure system vs my old PWM pump setup, but I'll get more into that once I'm done converting everything over. The ricer in me is excited to see SS tubing all over my manifold though!
×
×
  • Create New...