Also when you have the rail out check to make sure 1. Rail isnt bent anywhere 2. Each hole in the manifold is uniform and not somehow bigger 3. Each bottom oring is intact and its retainer didnt get cracked.
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No DIY for injector replacement?
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I used these
Originally posted by Zreberlcoe View PostI'm looking to replace my injectors with Mpowerful's 19# injectors and I can't find a single thing online for doing it. So it must be really easy, from what I have found its not, or it literally has not been documented and shared online. So I was wondering who could come up with some good steps for doing 19# injectors WITHOUT removing the intake manifold, because I know it's possible.
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So... It was that screw... I feel dumb but the reason I kept denying the fact was because I thought the screw being broke in there was sealing the hole up. But some spray found it out real quick it was leaking from there. Now I just have to be careful extracting it.1991 325i Calypso Coupe
Like Grandfather, Like Father, Like Son
BMW
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Easiest way to pinpoint a miss is to pull the plug wires one by one with the engine at idle. We did this during my chip/injector swap and found the bad injector quickly.
Hissing is always a vacuum leak and I wouldn't put too much faith in the ability of 30yo ECU technology to re learn without clearing out the old data by disconnecting the battery. At least that's how I solved my high idle.Seat Shocks....I have passed the baton to John Christy from Ninestitch. Email John or Garrett at ninestitch1@gmail.com
https://www.r3vlimited.com/board/sho...86#post4944786
Alice the Time Capsule
http://www.r3vlimited.com/board/showthread.php?t=360504
87 Zinno Cabrio barn find 98k and still smells like a barn. Build thread http://www.r3vlimited.com/board/show...20#post3455220
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I had my local general-purpose auto shop smoke test my intake system. They charged half an hour of shop time, found 2 vacuum leaks, fixed both (electrical tape) and charged me 45 bucks total. I tipped the mechanic $20 and the car ran much better. With the age of the rubber bits, and the complexity of all the vacuum crap on these cars, a smoke test is well worth the cost. DIY is great up to a point, but save yourself some brain damage and have it smoked.
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Originally posted by funcrew View PostI had my local general-purpose auto shop smoke test my intake system. They charged half an hour of shop time, found 2 vacuum leaks, fixed both (electrical tape) and charged me 45 bucks total. I tipped the mechanic $20 and the car ran much better. With the age of the rubber bits, and the complexity of all the vacuum crap on these cars, a smoke test is well worth the cost. DIY is great up to a point, but save yourself some brain damage and have it smoked.1991 325i Calypso Coupe
Like Grandfather, Like Father, Like Son
BMW
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