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http://www.batauto.com/nissan.html
The mechanic replaced the PCV and EGR valve and did a complete fuel injection service. They said the entire emissions system was gunked up with carbon. It was hooked up to the machine for about 45 minutes, and now runs really smooth.
FYI, they said that is is common for GMC vehicles to build up carbon.
Can anyone tell me what an EGR valve does. Obviously I never had a problem with one because I'd never even heard of it.
I'm usually successful at getting the light to go out.
The key to it is, to retrieve the trouble codes, which your vehicel requires a scanner. Then with the trouble codes, using a good information system, such as the Alldata DIY subscription, using the trouble code flowcharts to properly diagnose the trouble codes.
Are you mechanically inclined? If you wish to do the work yourself, you will need to have a scanner, a digital volt/ohm meter and the information. You can purchase a one year subscription to Alldata's DIY subscription for one vehicle for $24.95 and it will provide you with all the factory information for your vehicle, including TSB info.
Apparently there is a glitch with the new CR-V that causes the CEL to illuminate. When they pull the code they get a number that tells them there is an error in the fuel ratio. If they follow the normal template they would replace the O2 or other sensors. However people are reporting CEL again after the sensor(s) is replaced. Honda has determined that it is a software problem and until a fix is ready they are only supposed to reset the light. Now bear in mind this was told to me by one Honda Servie Manager, another one wasn't really sure so who knows for sure. When I bring my vehicle in I will only have them pull the code. If it matches the number I will have them only reset the light. Not sure what else to do. I should point out that it is possible there are different codes involved, if that is the case the normal fix should be done.
Does anyone know if it is still OK to drive a few hundred miles on a trip. The dealer said it would be about 3 weeks or so, many are in line to get the same thing replaced. Dealer said it should be fine to drive.
Hope it helps
http://www.batauto.com/Gm.html
I find. Again thanks for your suggestion.
It is nice to have some knowledge to tap
into.
If you look at your plug, there is a notch in the top center of the plug. Notice the notch in the picture. The corresponding slots are the 2 to jump. If you look into the plug with a flashlight, you will see that only about 5 of the slots have actual terminals in them.
The image is exactly as you would be looking at your plug. I'll have to get an actual picture and replace that drawing.
This happens only
1. When I start the car and within the first few minutes.
2. I have been using the car for a few stops and *never* early morning. Only if I drive the car for maybe 20 mins stop the car for sometime less than few hrs, drive again for 20-30 minutes etc. Never in the beginning of the day and never when the car has been parked for more than 8+ hrs.
Recently the Check Engine Light also started coming on and the code check revealed problem with air/fuel ratio sensor ( same as or similar to O2 sensor).
Does this appear an accurate diagnosis and are these the symptoms of a bad O2 or Air/Fuel Ratio sensor ? The car has about 66000 miles and this problem has been around since a year.
Please advise.
Thanks.
The local auto shop told me that is the "Air fuel ratio sensor" which will cost $380 for parts from dealer.
Can any one verify this code with the parts? I would really appreciate if someone could have this answer!
Thanks,
Vincent
Scenario 1: the sensor's pooched and sending the ecm bad info, causing it to over-fuel bank #1
Scenario 2: the sensor's working properly and reporting a lean condition caused by a vacuum leak, or by an engine misfire (plug, wire, injector, etc). Has it been tuned recently and how's it running?
It just happen after I done the 80K miles oil change. The car run great without any problems!
Base on the Code, The shop told me that is the Air fuel ratio sensor next to the engine. Since the parts will cost $375, He recommend I may try to clean the Injector and engine to improve it first!
LUBRO MOGO - PROLINE (Fuel System Cleaner Concentrate) to clean the Fuel Injector,
Excell Super Engine Magic, Multi-use Cleaning Fomula, Part# PRX51GS to Gas Tank
and reset the memory to clear the engine light.
Hopefully, it will works for me!
He also suggested me to use the 91 gas instead!(The master mechanic from dealer told me before)
Is that the right parts? (Air fuel ratio sensor)
Thanks,
Vincent
kirstie_h
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2015 Kia Soul, 2021 Subaru Forester (kirstie_h), 2024 GMC Sierra 1500 (mr. kirstie_h)
Review your vehicle
When mileage reached 232, the check engine light was ON. We brought the car to dealer, and they only reset the light. The car has been in and out the dealer many times. Nothing got resolved. The light keeps ON. I contacted American Honda. No satisfactory service was taken. They want us to continue driving with the check engine light ON. Can we believe them? Can anyone help, please? Who is going to buy a car with a check engine light ON? We don't want the dealer simply to reset the light, but fix it for the normal performance.
I feels that Service Engine Soon Light can be ON while
dealer or garage can not find any error code.
Beside the PCM is bad, which kind case will
do that? If any one can collect such kind information?
I feels that Car Manufactory should design the device on
the car to display the code without the customers to buy
the scanner tool separately.
Specifically if the power steering can be made to drive with a lighter feel or if the engine idle speed, when hot, can be increased?
My new Cavalier has an idle of about 500 RPM and the steering feels VERY stiff taking off from a stop. When the engine is cold and the idle is at about 1000 RPM, the steerinig feels lighter and I would like it that way all of the time. The idle speed adjustment screw is off limits to me with a 5-sided torx screw (not the usual 6-sided version).
Thanks in advance.
I feels that Service Engine Soon Light can be ON while dealer or garage can not find any error code.
Nope, not gonna happen. If the light is on, there is a code. No ifs, ands or buts. Now, if the light goes out before the vehicle reaches the shop, that is another thing. With the correct scanner, any problem can be found.
Beside the PCM is bad, which kind case will
do that?
That would be the only one, but usually when a ECM/PCM goes bad, it will throw tons of codes, just none of them will make sense.
If any one can collect such kind information?
How do you mean collect such kind of information?
I feels that Car Manufactory should design the device on the car to display the code without the customers to buy the scanner tool separately.
Never gonna happen. There are a few vehicles that will display the codes on a digital dash, but there is no requirement on that by the govt, nor is it ever going to happen. The manufacturers don't like the idea of an independant mechanic working on their vehicles, let alone a DIYer.
Some manufacturers are even going to the extreme of blocking information to the DIYer.
taskmaster,
Does anyone one here know of a source of possible engine control settings that a 2002 Chevy Cavalier can be set to?
There are some chip manufacturers that design chips (PROM) to do different things to the engine.
Specifically if the power steering can be made to drive with a lighter feel or if the engine idle speed, when hot, can be increased?
No. There isn't any way to modify the engine speed with a setting. It may be possible to get a chip and program it to increase the idle, but unless you know what you are doing, it would be best to not mess with it.
Thanks
what exactly does the EGR valve do? i'm pretty sure thats the problem with my car and there isnt any problems when the light comes on so i havent taken any time out to take my car in just yet because i really HATE the dealer so i wont go in until i have to.
By the way, that Olds was one of the very best vehicles I have ever owned. I hate to see the brand go down... That and the memories of one Cadillac are all that keep me from otherwise despising GM! (:oÞ
Remember, when you go to Autozone to have the "free" code pulling, you get what you pay for.
some snot nosed kid comes out and plugs a unit into your vehicle's computer, which BTW can run from $100 - $1,000. The pulls the codes, which they've had no training or experience on and then diagnoses your problem.
NOT A CHANCE.
Now, I have nothing against AZ doing the free code pulling, but realize, that is all it is. They are not mechanics.
Ok, enough of that, to your problem.
Proper diagnosis would have been to clear the codes, road test the vehicle and recheck codes, then use the proper flow chart to prperly diagnose/test for the actual problem.
If the forward O2 sensor (bank 1 sensor 1) is bad, then it could cause the cat to plug. But replacing parts without knowing is guesswork.
P0133 HO2S slow response.
Possible causes,
Contaminated HO2S sensor
Exhaust leaks
shorted/open wires in HO2S circuit
Excessive fueling/rich condition
MAF sensor circuit problem
vacuum/air leaks
P0420
Possible causes,
use of leaded or contaminated fuel
oil contamination
cylinder misfire
damaged HO2S
damaged ECT sensor
downstream HO2S sensor circuit improperly connected
fuel pressure too high
exhaust leaks
damaged catalytic converter
Opatiance, I don't know if you are a licensed mechanic or not, but I bet that a lot of old back yard mechanics can still diagnose a problem w/o a computer to tell them what is going on. All the computer has done over the years is make the mechanic lazy, they don't have to think anymore, just follow diagnosis trees and computer codes. Then when the car runs like doo doo and the computer tells them bunk they can't figure it out. I am not trying to slam you or other mechanics, but in my experience mechanics don't think the average guy can fix a car anymore, and make it sound like a big long drawn out process. Some things are intimidating, and others extremely simple, like the gas cap DTC, how often does that happen? My dealer says they get 10-20 cars a day with that one. So why bother to take the car in to the shop and not have it for 1 or 2 days when AZ can pull the code and check the gas cap for free in the parking lot while you wait and watch? Pulling codes from a cars computer can be done by a 4th grader now a days, so chill out a little. Your help is still needed and appreciated by me and the other posters on the board. As you know some codes are decisive, and others have a ton of other related stuff that can cause them. No one likes to just throw parts at a car hoping the light goes out, they need an expert that can do the proper test to figure out what part is actually bad. Most of the time if you talk people through it they will come in for work if it is something over their head, or even for simple things like an oil change, word of mouth is the best advertisement, so capitalize on it, it they tell a friend and they tell a friend.....
Afraid not. Not anymore.
Most tests require a scanner to see what the sensor is doing. Specific tests for specific sensors and without the tests, it is guess work.
Opatiance, I don't know if you are a licensed mechanic or not, but I bet that a lot of old back yard mechanics can still diagnose a problem w/o a computer to tell them what is going on. All the computer has done over the years is make the mechanic lazy, they don't have to think anymore, just follow diagnosis trees and computer codes.
This ain't Canada, there are no licensed mechanics in the US, with exception of DEQ certifications.
As you know some codes are decisive, and others have a ton of other related stuff that can cause them. No one likes to just throw parts at a car hoping the light goes out, they need an expert that can do the proper test to figure out what part is actually bad.
I know full well about the codes and related stuff. Who do you think wrote this??
Most of the time if you talk people through it they will come in for work if it is something over their head, or even for simple things like an oil change, word of mouth is the best advertisement, so capitalize on it, it they tell a friend and they tell a friend.....
Again, check my site and my history here and then tell me about talking people thru things.
Besides, the codes this person was asking about required a scanner to test the HO2S sensor. That is a little more than the DIYer can do.
Pulling codes from a cars computer can be done by a 4th grader now a days, so chill out a little. Your help is still needed and appreciated by me and the other posters on the board.
No, it has experts like you to help. I'm done. To tired of this to argue anymore.
Have fun all.
Can someone give me a heads-up of what's happening here? I'm not *the* mechanic, but have some tools and can cipher out some things.
A second mechanic has advised looking at a wire that plugs into the transmission. As it was recently repaired (not by him), he thinks it may have been left unattached.
The truck runs OK, with highway mileage in the low 20's. It has never been too powerful, so I'm not expecting an asphalt shreedder.
Opinions or advice are appreciated.
Tommy
causing the problem? - Thanks
I want to give an example of the computer telling you nothing and the basics being needed to be brought back into a lot of shops, just to get things fixed right the first time. I have a '92 Dodge van with a 318 and MFI. I had a problem with the cat overheating and the engine performance. I took it to a shop to have it fixed, and they found a defective fuel pump regulator, R & R'd it same problem. New cat same problem, new muffler same thing. I gave up on that shop and took it to the dealer where the mechanic found the trouble, a bad ignition coil that was breaking down after it warmed up leaking spark to ground, dumping the unburned fuel into the cat causing it to meltdown. The computer didn't tell them one thing, and the skill of a mechanic that kept a firm grip on the basics fixed the thing. After spending over $500 throwing parts at it all it ended up being was a $35 coil. Now for an example of AZ coming to the rescue with the code reader they use. A friend of mine has a '97 GMC Sonoma, it had the CES light on and he took it up there to have it scanned after a few weeks. It was a bad o2 sensor, bank 2 sensor 1. They knew which one was bad based on the readings that it was sending, so they do check to see what the problem can be stemming from, not just selling a bunch of parts that might fix it, they try to get to the root cause of the problem. As you know the Sonoma has 4 o2 sensors on it, they looked at it to find the bad one, not sell him all 4.
I don't know why you got all bent out of shape over my post, it seems as though you are splitting hairs over the license vs. certified thing, most people use the term interchangeably. I guess what I am saying is that sometimes people need a place to go to get help, if it's AZ so be it. I know I hate paying someone else to work on my stuff, especially if I can do the work myself after diagnosis. If AZ does the hard part, figuring out what the problem is, for free and has the parts I need to fix it that is where people will go for the parts. How many shops do you know of that will do that? My guess is none.