Conducted a search, nothing quite the same as this issue turned up
Spoke to flash at length, and he provided a list of possible culprits which will be tested
So the reason for this post is simply to find out if anyone here has experienced the same symptom and if so, what was ( were ) the cause (s ) and solution to the problem
After the car sits for at least 6-8 hrs, at the first turn of the key ( it cranks fine ) it struggles to start , "stumbles", it really never catches on enough to actually idle, and then stalls completely in about 2 seconds.. pushing the gas pedal during this does not make a difference, or keeping the pedal down a little, or half way before cranking does not make a difference
However, after the car shuts off, I pause no more than 1 or 2 seconds and turn the key again, the car starts immediately and idles perfectly ( no idle hunting at all, it's smooth as can be ) and runs / responds for the rest of the time without a single problem. Or I can pause for 5 seconds, or for a minute, or for hours after that first intital stall, it still starts and runs as if the problem was never there
So, again it's consistently only during that very first attempt that the problem manisfests itself, and consistently starts right away and runs perfectly a second or two later
Has anyone here experienced this issue ?
p.s. yes, I replaced the DME relay to see what might happen ( i have two brand new spares, tried both ) - no change
I'm curious:
1. Do you have any blink test codes?
2. Would it stumble the first time you attempt to start it if you turned the ignition to "ON" for 5-10 seconds, *then* tried to start the car? ('cuz I wonder if your <acronym title='mass air flow'>MAF</acronym> wire isn't getting the current it needs to heat up quickly enough.)
I presume Flash has suggested changing the check valve after the fuel filter/pump?
so as to eliminate repetition of things i have already told him to check:
key on delay has been checked - no change
vacuum lines are being checked. old hoses. possibly a secondary system leak (i.e. AOS)
spark plug torque is being checked. i put in new plugs. the seals were shot, and the old plugs and plug threads were very wet. the new plugs may have backed off.
throttle plate position is being checked. it might be stuck open too far, and not closing fully until some air from the first start gets in there and settles it.
yes, i suspected the check valve and/or filter, for a minute. however, i don't think that is the problem, as it starts right up after the first failure. if it were the valve or a fuel supply issue, there would be a delay of a few seconds before it started.
the other thing that is suspect is the high tension lead. his spark plug wires are shot. the high tension lead fell apart in my hand, leaving part of a connector stuck in the distributor cap. i had to make up a new wire to get him home, as everybody was 2 days out on a correct replacement part. wires and cap are being changed.
MAF was cleaned thoroughly before he left.
Durametric showed no codes when he left.
this problem popped up only after he had been home for a couple of days. all was fine up until then.
[quote name='tamathumper' timestamp='1384298184' post='152121']
I'm curious:
1. Do you have any blink test codes?
2. Would it stumble the first time you attempt to start it if you turned the ignition to "ON" for 5-10 seconds, *then* tried to start the car? ('cuz I wonder if your <acronym title='mass air flow'>MAF</acronym> wire isn't getting the current it needs to heat up quickly enough.)
[/quote]
1. No ( blink test ) fault codes
2. Tried that ( Bob already covered the key delay ) but yeah, no change
3. And as noted in Bob's post there is an entire laundry list to test, most of which I will hand over to my mechanic
So my intent was only to determine if someone here had this exact issue happen to their car, rather than a supplemental " possible causes " search . Of course the hope is for a : " - yes, that's precisely what mine did, and as soon as I cleaned and reconnected the thingamajiggy, it never had a probelm since....and I also gained an extra 25 hp " reply.. <img src="/forum/images/smilies/968/laugh.png" class="smilie" alt="" />
Update : just for the heck of it, I switched one more dme relay and at flash's suggestion, re-seated the coil wire plugs, once again. ( when the symptoms first started I unplugged and re-plugged the wire but it did not make a difference at the time..) . The car started on the first crank this morning. Now I wish I would have done just one of those things, at a time ! <img src="/forum/images/smilies/968/whine.gif" class="smilie" alt="" /> But the bet is on the makeshift coil wire, so as soon as the broken part insidethe distributor cap's neck is removed, and the OE wire goes in there, I'll switch back to the old DME relay and if the symptom does not repeat I'll know for sure. And if it does, I'll do the DME switch again to test that possibility.
yup - i had to build that wire, as i had already given away my spare to somebody else. that's why i said to change it as soon as you got home. it's no surprise to me that it would be the cause of the problem. it isn't a perfect fit. i had to mess with it quite a bit to get it to seat and stay there. very possible it just isn't making good contact.
we'll know soon enough.
Interesting. My car is doing pretty much the same thing. When starting it to first time of the day, it doesn't catch. But on the second attempt, without touching the gas, it start perfectly, and idles smoothly at the correct rpm. I doubt it's the DME relay, because I tested it by applying 12V to the connectors that energize the coil, and then confirmed the switch activates (it makes a loud, reassuring click). I'll take a good look at my coil wire, and maybe just go ahead and replace it. But what is it about a faulty coil wire that could cause such a consistent starts-on-the-second-try symptom?
the high tension lead sees current all the time the engine is running. the spark plug wires only get it as the rotor passes by. hence, the high tension lead burns out much faster. also, spark plug wires are very fragile. it takes very little to mess up the inside. since they fail from the inside, and you cannot tell with any form of inspection, they are recommended to be changed every other spark plug change.
in dan's case, his came apart in my hand, leaving the contact stuck in the cap. i had to build a wire with a standard sleeve type connector, rather than the pin type that we normally have. this did not make contact like the OEM. it worked, but was only a temporary measure. i would have replaced it correctly, if we had access to a new part. he had to make the drive home though, and there was no time to get the correct part.
But any idea why a faulty high tension lead would manifest as this particular symptom?
something at one of the connectors i'm sure.
switched DMEs back this morning and the car started right way, so it was definitely the coil wire connectors' contact that caused the problem. so nice when you realize it's the cheap and simple fix , as opposed to the PITA one.. <img src="/forum/images/smilies/968/smile.png" class="smilie" alt="" />
yeah - like i said at the beginning, i didn't like that wire, but had no options. things like this are hard to diagnose, because you can't see any cause of symptoms