![]() | |
![]() |
| | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
| |||
| |||
|
#2
| |||
| |||
|
|
Hi, Checking in with the gurus. I have a '90 Golf (gas engine, 8 valve) that's been exhibiting short bouts of faltering on acceleration most times when going uphill. The engine doesn't cut out entirely and continues running, but power is severely reduced so the car essentially coasts for up to 1/2 second. Not too long, then the engine returns to normal power and the car continues to run fine again. The faltering won't appear again for weeks or months. But today, it was pretty bad and I moving onto the main road from an alley and was left exposed without any acceleration with oncoming traffic bearing down. After faltering for what felt like a full second, the engine came back to full power. I'm thinking the transfer fuel pump. I believe it's the original at almost 19 years old with 216,000 km on it. Is that a logical place to start? The main pump isn't buzzing so I didn't think it was starved for fuel. If it was the fuel pump relay or an electrical problem, I'm guessing the engine would just quit. Other than the infrequent faltering, the engine runs fine. thanks. |
#3
| |||
| |||
|
|
Did you notice any black smoke or smell any unburnt gas coming out of the exhaust? With the Digifant FI systems I usually find that the ground wires near the rear of the cylinder head or intake manifold have broken. *That causes a serious loss of power and gas mileage. Also I have repaired wiring to the Throttle Body also. I have also replaced a few Fuel Pressure Regulators too that leaked fuel through the vacuum hose sporadically. *A clogged catalytic converter or muffler could also cause running problems. Of course check your distributor cap to make sure that center tip is still there and I ONLY use BOSCH distributor rotors. *I have seen more than one aftermarket rotor fail causing nasty running problems. Just some ideas! -- later, (One out of many daves) |
#4
| |||
| |||
|
|
Did you notice any black smoke or smell any unburnt gas coming out of the exhaust? With the Digifant FI systems I usually find that the ground wires near the rear of the cylinder head or intake manifold have broken. That causes a serious loss of power and gas mileage. Also I have repaired wiring to the Throttle Body also. I have also replaced a few Fuel Pressure Regulators too that leaked fuel through the vacuum hose sporadically. A clogged catalytic converter or muffler could also cause running problems. Of course check your distributor cap to make sure that center tip is still there and I ONLY use BOSCH distributor rotors. I have seen more than one aftermarket rotor fail causing nasty running problems. Just some ideas! -- later, (One out of many daves) |
#5
| |||
| |||
|
|
Checking in with the gurus. I have a '90 Golf (gas engine, 8 valve) that's been exhibiting short bouts of faltering on acceleration most times when going uphill. The engine doesn't cut out entirely and continues running, but power is severely reduced so the car essentially coasts for up to 1/2 second. Not too long, then the engine returns to normal power and the car continues to run fine again. The faltering won't appear again for weeks or months. But today, it was |
#6
| |||
| |||
|
#7
| |||
| |||
|
|
away after starting. Doing some reading, someone mentioned the fuel pump stops if the coil isn't sending out pulses on the high voltage terminal. The idea is if the engine stops running, say in an accident, the fuel pump doesn't keep pumping fuel into a potential fiery situation. The coil connectors were a bit corroded so I cleaned them and applied dielectric grease. Since cleaning the coil contacts, I've |
#8
| |||
| |||
|
|
Hi, Some more diagnosis and a possible fix. I checked the ground straps and checked for vacuum leaks. Nothing obvious. The distributor and cap are relatively, new, maybe 6 months and I only use Bosch parts, they looked good. I changed the transfer fuel pump (about 18-19 years old) but that didn't help, engine still faltered. In fact stalled right away after starting. Doing some reading, someone mentioned the fuel pump stops if the coil isn't sending out pulses on the high voltage terminal. The idea is if the engine stops running, say in an accident, the fuel pump doesn't keep pumping fuel into a potential fiery situation. The coil connectors were a bit corroded so I cleaned them and applied dielectric grease. Since cleaning the coil contacts, I've driven 1,200 km over the long weekend and there hasn't been one instance of faltering. The coil contacts may have been the problem. Will report back in a couple of months. Good mileage this trip too, 5.6 L/100 km or 42 mpg (US Gal) or 50.4 mpg (Imperial) on a gas engine, with a fairly full load with mountain passes topping out at 1,240 m and some 11% grades. |
#9
| |||
| |||
|
|
Congrats on your finding the problem and thanks for posting the solution! ;-) |
#10
| |||
| |||
|
|
Could you please point out where those connectors are situated at so I could search for any rust traces there? Thanks in advance! |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |