Hey mangs, sorry I haven't been around much, just ben busy with school.
Was driving the marquis the other day on the highway when i noticed the engine temp was low (150). Seemed kind of odd so I made sure the fan was off, turned off the heater and took it out of overdrive to see if it would go back to normal. Nothing was making it go back up so I decided to stop and just sit for a few minutes, but as I was slowing down (~25mph) I noticed it was very hard to stop and the rpm's were still up near 2000. When i put it in park the rpm shot up to 3300 and wouldn't settle down. Looked around for any obvious vacuum leaks and smacked the IAC a few times but no change. Looked around a bit more, checked the fluids and made sure the throttle wasn't just sticking but couldn't find the problem. Was out in the middle of nowhere so just decided to keep driving, it was another 70 miles or so before i got home. The issue still persisted, although at highway speeds nothing seemed out of the ordinary other than the temp still staying down.
Pulled the codes this morning, memory showed an ACT out of range, and ECT out of range code. Checked both sensors while plugged in and they read exactly as they should at that temperature.
Pulled the cruise servo cable off, no change.
Blew some smoke into the intake manifold through a hose to check for vac leaks and found none. Hooked up the vac gauge and while idling at 3300 it was a steady 21 inches.
Pulled the IAC off and cleaned it out, though it wasn't very dirty and seemed to be moving properly. Reinstalled but still @ 3300 rpms. When i pull the IAC plug the idle drops to a steady 1900 rpm.
Checked the TPS but it was perfect. (.97v @ closed throttle)
Pulled the vac line at the fuel pressure regulator, no fuel leaked out. Hooked up the fuel pressure gauge, got 33 psi after priming the pump, and ~30 psi @ 3300 rpm.
Removed the map sensor and checked it with an oscilloscope and vacuum gauge. Frequencies matched the specs on http://oldfuelinjection.com/?p=27 perfectly.
Distributor was still tight, and according to the marks I made at the base, hadn't moved at all. Spout connector was still there.
If i start it and hold my finger over the inlet to the IAC I can get the rpm's down, so it sort of seems to be an issue with the IAC. I installed another IAC from some other ford which when unplugged brought the rpms down a little more than the other to ~1600. Has a different plug, so wasn't able to try it plugged in.
With the IAC unplugged should it even run at all? Seems like the spring should hold the valve completely shut letting no air through... unless the manifold vacuum is stronger than the spring and is sucking it open?
Everything seems to point to the engine getting more air than it needs, however the IAC doesn't seem like the definite problem.
Don't really have the money to spend on a new IAC that may not fix it so I wanted to see if any of you had some other ideas, thanks in advance...
-Mark
Was driving the marquis the other day on the highway when i noticed the engine temp was low (150). Seemed kind of odd so I made sure the fan was off, turned off the heater and took it out of overdrive to see if it would go back to normal. Nothing was making it go back up so I decided to stop and just sit for a few minutes, but as I was slowing down (~25mph) I noticed it was very hard to stop and the rpm's were still up near 2000. When i put it in park the rpm shot up to 3300 and wouldn't settle down. Looked around for any obvious vacuum leaks and smacked the IAC a few times but no change. Looked around a bit more, checked the fluids and made sure the throttle wasn't just sticking but couldn't find the problem. Was out in the middle of nowhere so just decided to keep driving, it was another 70 miles or so before i got home. The issue still persisted, although at highway speeds nothing seemed out of the ordinary other than the temp still staying down.
Pulled the codes this morning, memory showed an ACT out of range, and ECT out of range code. Checked both sensors while plugged in and they read exactly as they should at that temperature.
Pulled the cruise servo cable off, no change.
Blew some smoke into the intake manifold through a hose to check for vac leaks and found none. Hooked up the vac gauge and while idling at 3300 it was a steady 21 inches.
Pulled the IAC off and cleaned it out, though it wasn't very dirty and seemed to be moving properly. Reinstalled but still @ 3300 rpms. When i pull the IAC plug the idle drops to a steady 1900 rpm.
Checked the TPS but it was perfect. (.97v @ closed throttle)
Pulled the vac line at the fuel pressure regulator, no fuel leaked out. Hooked up the fuel pressure gauge, got 33 psi after priming the pump, and ~30 psi @ 3300 rpm.
Removed the map sensor and checked it with an oscilloscope and vacuum gauge. Frequencies matched the specs on http://oldfuelinjection.com/?p=27 perfectly.
Distributor was still tight, and according to the marks I made at the base, hadn't moved at all. Spout connector was still there.
If i start it and hold my finger over the inlet to the IAC I can get the rpm's down, so it sort of seems to be an issue with the IAC. I installed another IAC from some other ford which when unplugged brought the rpms down a little more than the other to ~1600. Has a different plug, so wasn't able to try it plugged in.
With the IAC unplugged should it even run at all? Seems like the spring should hold the valve completely shut letting no air through... unless the manifold vacuum is stronger than the spring and is sucking it open?
Everything seems to point to the engine getting more air than it needs, however the IAC doesn't seem like the definite problem.
Don't really have the money to spend on a new IAC that may not fix it so I wanted to see if any of you had some other ideas, thanks in advance...
-Mark
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