Originally posted by pandaboo911
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10$ to whoever solves my problem!
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"i love vee tek, its a wonderful sound when you driving right by it"
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Installed new collaboration temp sensor and sender uni (blue and brown ones in the thermostat) and I get 16 mpg now but my problem remains. Changed injectors and my problem remains. Unplugged my o2 sensor and my gas mileage did not change whatsoever. Exhaust leak?1991 318i - T-Boned
1987 325is - Sold
1991 318is - Current
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I suggested you test the TPS. If you have, or can borrow a multimeter, it's free to test and takes 5min. Test for dead short on two pins while throttle closed. If they are all open when throttle closed, the ECU "thinks" your foot is on the pedal and adds fuel to compensate.
Seen it many times...
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Originally posted by ForcedFirebird View PostStuck injector is easy to diagnose. Pull the valve cover to gain access to the fuel rail bolts, lift up the fuel rail with injectors still attached to it, plug the vent hose coming from the TB and attempt to start it (may start but will ruin bad with the inj holes open). Alternately you can jump the fuel pump relay and if the inj is stuck, it will spray.
Also I have seen rich condition from a bad TPS. If the idle switch in the TPS is not working, the ECU thinks your foot is on the gas even though the throttle is closed. With enough fuel to smell up the oil, then it's more likely to be an injector.
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Originally posted by Julien View PostBe careful with that, I've seen a small fire start from someone using this exact technique
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take the car to someone who knows what they are doing.
seriously, this is the biggest lesson I have learned with these older BMWs.
everyone on here is just speculating, same as you. its like going to a psychic - they just keep guessing, because eventually one is going to be right.
throwing parts at oddly running BMW is a bad idea, there are tools to diagnose it. go to a good indy shop, they fix it up in a snap. more $$ up front, but less money that youll spend throwing parts yourself.
the rest of an e30 is simple and intuitive and can be learned easily with reading and manuals, but the engine management shit can really be a science.
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Originally posted by straight6pwr View Posttake the car to someone who knows what they are doing.
seriously, this is the biggest lesson I have learned with these older BMWs.
everyone on here is just speculating, same as you. its like going to a psychic - they just keep guessing, because eventually one is going to be right.
throwing parts at oddly running BMW is a bad idea, there are tools to diagnose it. go to a good indy shop, they fix it up in a snap. more $$ up front, but less money that youll spend throwing parts yourself.
the rest of an e30 is simple and intuitive and can be learned easily with reading and manuals, but the engine management shit can really be a science.
This is not bad advice. If you find an indy shop like ours, we will even help guide you through your own repairs once we diagnose, but the diagnosis fee is waived if we do the work. Newer cars are the same way with diagnosis. People bring their car to a parts store, have the codes read, then wonder why they spent $100 on a new oxygen sensor when they actually had a vacuum leak. Even the new car codes are for reference only. The "bad" part may just be a result of something else wrong.
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Check this sensor, the cylinder identification sensor, its right off the distributor and runs back to where the CPS plugs into the harness (under the diag. port)
Mine is broken off at the spark plug wire, took me FOREVER to find out where it went!
It is supposed to let the management system know when to fire the correct bank of injectors, I have read, but have not confirmed, that without the sensor all injectors fire every time.
I have the sometimes starts right up, sometimes cranks a bit issue, but not the other problems you mention.
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