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Three things I would check/change first are the DME relay, fuel filter, throttle body sensor/throttle body cleaning, or battery ground.
Over the years i have had the issue on a few different cars and one of the three items above have solved the problem for me.
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Joel Frahm
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It could be fuel related . my car has a kill switch for the fuel pump .
Takes about half a sec , after you flip it to stop the engine instant . no sputter and when you turn the pump on again , it wil pick up instant as wel with no sputter .
My guess bad pump , or wires damaged .
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my sugest is to replace the wiring from the dme till the fuelpump. why? this because there is a connector 50 centimeter from the fuelpomp what could be the problem. you have to measure the voltage at the fusebox. and then measure the voltage at the pump. Is there a difference from 1 volt then there is a resistance in the connectors. The connector is getting hotter and the clamp from the connector opens inside. When it opens the pump shut down due to a failure in the harness. When the connector cools down the fuelpump starts to work again. It is hard to find. I have had the same problem in the past with my tiptronic. The harness from a tip or a 6 speed is equal. You can also do a small test. put a fuelgauge at the fuelrail at the injectors. jumer the dme and let the pump run as long as it quits. You don't have to start the engine anyway. But connect a extra source for the battery because this will drain your battery. If the pump don't stop after half an hour you have to look elsewhere.
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[quote name='flash' timestamp='1352386599' post='134591']
view - are you sure that is a kill for the pump, or the relay to the DME? there should still be fuel in the rail, and power to the injectors if you only kill the pump, and it should still run for a few seconds after it is shut off.
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!00% sure it turns the pump off directly followed the wires so know they cut of the pump and not the dme relais , the wire and switch came with the car and they used a rear wiper switch to mask it , it is a bit odd since there is an alarm system installed .
I was acctually very surprised that the engine would die that quick after the pump stops , no sputter nothing .
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My 968 dies immidiatly when you turn of the pump. it doesn't run for a few seconds..... it stalls directly.
Ritchie owner of a '92 Coupe Tiptronic with the following standardoptions: C00, 030, 139, 249, 258, 340, 383, 387, 403, 418, 454, 490, 494, 567, 573, 650, 690, 14951
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[quote name='flash' timestamp='1352471502' post='134638']
how exactly do you turn off the pump? it doesn't make sense that it would not run for a few seconds. there is still fuel there, the ignition power is still on, and the injectors are still powered.
the only way to turn off the pump, is to cut into the wire at the pump, and disconnect it. i'm going to look at the wiring diagram, but i am pretty sure there is no point under the dash that you can disconnect it.
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The cutout switch wires tap into the wire to the pump , so like i said it turns off the pump , and it dies almost instant with no sputter .
When you think about is , most of the fuel lines are metal so no flex , only a few drop's of fuel without the pump running wil drop the pressur to zero .
I have disconcted the fuel lines at the valve cover a few times just after the car was shutdown , hardly an fuel comes out under pressure .
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[quote name='flash' timestamp='1352477289' post='134646']
lol - i am swapping injectors back and forth right now. i can tell you for certain that at least 10cc comes flowing out of there each and every time. the spec for the system is something like that it should hold at least 20lbs of pressure for at least 20 minutes after shut down. it takes my car about a half hour to drop the pressure. the fuel rail should always remain full though, even after the pressure drop. there is something very wrong with your car if there is no fuel in the rail when you open it up after shutdown.
there is no reason i can see that would allow the engine to shut off completely if the injectors are still powered, and the ignition is still on, unless the injectors are acting as a check valve somehow, and require a minimum amount of pressure to open. then the engine would run that long and then shut off. the operating pressure is 3.8 bar. if the injectors require say 3 bar, then it would only run for a second or two.
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Go drive your car and turn off your fuel pump , see what happens .
Also i said , only few drops wil drop the Pressure to zero , and hardlty any fuel comes out UNDER pressure , i did not mention draining the sytem or fuel rail .
I do not think the car wil run without the pressure in the sytem .
Bear in mind i am dutch so english not alway so easy to explain .
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