Post by
mcastro »
https://forums.nicoclub.com/mcastro-u22582.html
Fri Feb 05, 2010 4:59 pm
I had a local shop perform some minor service my car recently, and the tech suggested I degrease the engine, which was needed due to a leaky valve cover gasket. Seems like a simple task..the engine bay looks great, but after I picked the car up, the drive afterwords was not. Idle was rough and would die, and although it performed well under acceleration and at freeway speeds, I was surprised to see my gas gage literally drop after a few miles of driving. I returned back to the shop, and the technician said that this is a common occurrence and that things should return to normal after letting the engine dry. I was not very convinced, but I thought I would give it a chance to dry overnight
The next morning, new symptoms: idle was rough but was holding around 600 Rpm, but performance was not good as the engine also ran rough under acceleration and at low speeds, the exhaust was dark and smelled (almost like a cleaner...could have been just poorly combusted fuel). Before I could get it back to the shop, the engine just wouldn't turn over, so I had to have it towed (flatbed).
Here's my concern...the technician recommended swapping out the plugs (OEM only) and all coil packs, as he has diagnosed a weak spark. I would assume the plugs have become fouled, a result of a bad fuel-air mix or something else causing the problem, perhaps due to being exposed to excessive moisture (I suggested they test the MAF, but I was told that no codes were generated on the diag on the non-running engine). I am not going for the coil pack analysis, and am perturbed that the plugs need to be swapped out. Car was running fine prior to the "degreasing"exercise.
Two questions: coil packs (all 8), isn't that a blanket guess? And, what might be the cause for the sputtering idle and resultant fuel consumption after the cleaning?