Car: 1987 325iX manual
I just got Bad Idea back on the road after fixing a whole of of things that were "fixed" by the previous maintainer.
It floods on a warm restart. I can fire the car up cold and it starts readily. I drive for 1-5 minutes, shut it off and leave it for a couple of minutes. When I come back and try to restart, it floods. I can crank and crank and it won't start; I smell a LOT of fuel out the tailpipe.
If I remove the fuel pump relay, it will crank for a few seconds, then run for a couple of seconds on residual pressure in the fuel rail, then die.
Sometimes I can replace the fuel relay and start it right back up. However this morning I had to stand by the fender, reach through the open door to crank and pop the relay back in when it started because it was still flooding when I tried to restart otherwise.
Is there a common sensor failure (e.g. intake air temp) which causes this behavior?
Do the Bosch EFI systems have a "flood clear mode"? On GM systems from the late '80's and early '90's, flooring the gas pedal while cranking turns off the injectors and allows the engine to clear a flood, but that doesn't appear to work on the Bosch system.
Did the '87's still have cold start injectors?
It runs great most of the time, but on idling after a cold start, it will run the RPM up to 2000-2500 for a couple of minutes, then drop down to 600-800 for a couple of minutes, then back up to 2000-2500, etc.
I just got Bad Idea back on the road after fixing a whole of of things that were "fixed" by the previous maintainer.
It floods on a warm restart. I can fire the car up cold and it starts readily. I drive for 1-5 minutes, shut it off and leave it for a couple of minutes. When I come back and try to restart, it floods. I can crank and crank and it won't start; I smell a LOT of fuel out the tailpipe.
If I remove the fuel pump relay, it will crank for a few seconds, then run for a couple of seconds on residual pressure in the fuel rail, then die.
Sometimes I can replace the fuel relay and start it right back up. However this morning I had to stand by the fender, reach through the open door to crank and pop the relay back in when it started because it was still flooding when I tried to restart otherwise.
Is there a common sensor failure (e.g. intake air temp) which causes this behavior?
Do the Bosch EFI systems have a "flood clear mode"? On GM systems from the late '80's and early '90's, flooring the gas pedal while cranking turns off the injectors and allows the engine to clear a flood, but that doesn't appear to work on the Bosch system.
Did the '87's still have cold start injectors?
It runs great most of the time, but on idling after a cold start, it will run the RPM up to 2000-2500 for a couple of minutes, then drop down to 600-800 for a couple of minutes, then back up to 2000-2500, etc.
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