Hi!
Minor gripe to work out; probably an easy fix.
At idle sitting in traffic my car shakes a bit. There's just some harmonic vibration that causes it to rattle a little quicker than once a second.
I was asking a coworker (I'm @volvo) about it, and apparently some '90s models with the inline 5cyl had similar complaints, and it really does just come from harmonics and idle rpms being low. The turbo versions of the engine idled higher and picky high-maintenance volvo customers did not complain about them vibrating.
Seriously: I just got a car Friday where the customer complains that the starter "shakes" the car (well, yes, it's kicking the engine to life... you might see a ripple or two in your starbucks coffee), and that the a/c makes noise (well, yes, a fan moves air, and moving air makes noise)... In this case, it was a 10,000 mile brand new car with no issue at all. Obviously there are a/c compressors whose bearings go out, fans whose bearings go out, etc., this was not one of them.
Moving on.
If my tach is telling the truth, I'm idling at <300rpm, kinda low! That said, I don't know how much I trust its precision at the lowest end of its readout, so I might not be idling *quite* that low. *shrugs* who knows.
Unless the sort of tach that gets its reading directly from the distributor is always spot on.
If I nudge the gas and bring it to 500rpm it gets much smoother, and if I bring it to 600, 750rpm the vibration goes away completely.
So! Now I'm wondering how I can raise the idle rpms.
theoretical naive option (a): advance that throttle plate backing screw clockwise, so that even with my foot off the gas, it gets a little bit more air.
theoretical naive option (b): I've now got an explorer/mustang hybrid engine, with the original lopo IAC. If they fit, which I seem to remember they might not have... install a mustang or explorer IAC?
theoretical naive option (c): could tv cable pressure have anything to do with idle speed?
option (d): it's really no rougher than any true pickup, just live with it.
Minor gripe to work out; probably an easy fix.
At idle sitting in traffic my car shakes a bit. There's just some harmonic vibration that causes it to rattle a little quicker than once a second.
I was asking a coworker (I'm @volvo) about it, and apparently some '90s models with the inline 5cyl had similar complaints, and it really does just come from harmonics and idle rpms being low. The turbo versions of the engine idled higher and picky high-maintenance volvo customers did not complain about them vibrating.
Seriously: I just got a car Friday where the customer complains that the starter "shakes" the car (well, yes, it's kicking the engine to life... you might see a ripple or two in your starbucks coffee), and that the a/c makes noise (well, yes, a fan moves air, and moving air makes noise)... In this case, it was a 10,000 mile brand new car with no issue at all. Obviously there are a/c compressors whose bearings go out, fans whose bearings go out, etc., this was not one of them.
Moving on.
If my tach is telling the truth, I'm idling at <300rpm, kinda low! That said, I don't know how much I trust its precision at the lowest end of its readout, so I might not be idling *quite* that low. *shrugs* who knows.
Unless the sort of tach that gets its reading directly from the distributor is always spot on.
If I nudge the gas and bring it to 500rpm it gets much smoother, and if I bring it to 600, 750rpm the vibration goes away completely.
So! Now I'm wondering how I can raise the idle rpms.
theoretical naive option (a): advance that throttle plate backing screw clockwise, so that even with my foot off the gas, it gets a little bit more air.
theoretical naive option (b): I've now got an explorer/mustang hybrid engine, with the original lopo IAC. If they fit, which I seem to remember they might not have... install a mustang or explorer IAC?
theoretical naive option (c): could tv cable pressure have anything to do with idle speed?
option (d): it's really no rougher than any true pickup, just live with it.
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