I am 90% certain that your problem is a faulty coolant temp sensor or fouled wire harness that connects it.j-z wrote:sometimes after i drive it somewhere and park it ill come back to start it up, and itll sputter down and i have to open the throttle. few times it happened and it wouldnt start at all.
How bad would that shock your friend??WDRacing wrote:. Pull the fuse for the pump, have someone turn the motor over while your holding the plug wire to your tongue...WD
i was thinking something like this as well... or the cold-enrichment settings from the tune are way too rich.Zion8561 wrote:I am 90% certain that your problem is a faulty coolant temp sensor or fouled wire harness that connects it.
dude that made my night LMAOFlorida240sx wrote:How bad would that shock your friend??
I don't think it's getting power with the fuse out... what's the best way to tell? I'll definitely look into a fuel pressure gauge.WDRacing wrote:Ok, so the pump isn't getting power with the fuse out right? You need a fuel pressure gauge, I'd buy one asap. Once the lines have fuel in them, the car will run for a few minutes until the fuel system is depleted. But with the fuse pulled, you should definitly have no power at the pump.
Is the IAT sensor installed? How about the water temp sensor? Having any of thses faulty will give you some problems, although I doubt this severe.
Doubtful. I had a problem with the coolant temp sensor wire(broken inside the insulation). The ECU ignores the signal for a certain period of time upon start-up. Then once it detects the problem, the coolant sensor giving no or a very erratic signal, it goes into a failsafe mode, limiting you to 1500 RPM. This was on a 98 240 that I had the issue with. The motor would start up fine with a bad signal. It would idle fine as well. It would limit RPM, but otherwise would be fine. I limped my car home with less than 1500 RPM many times when I was troubleshooting that problem.Zion8561 wrote:
I am 90% certain that your problem is a faulty coolant temp sensor or fouled wire harness that connects it.