Printable Version | Subscribe | Add to Favourites
New Topic New Poll New Reply
Author: Subject: KLDE V6 too much crankcase vacuum?
KFC

posted on 17/7/16 at 10:24 PM Reply With Quote
KLDE V6 too much crankcase vacuum?

Hi all,
I am struggling with my V6 RX8 and I'm desperate to fix it as I've spent a 2 years on it and now I've lost my patience with it feel like selling it as there are a few teething issues. I've got it running and drove it for about 60 miles or so. It has TB's on it and they charge up a resivoir for the brakes and crankcase. It ran on the dyno with it disconnected and then reconnected it to drive it home. It was ok until a misfire, running on 3 cylinders and the other 3 seemed to have the injectors stuck open, such a rediculas amount of smoke that was unburnt fuel, no hint of oil smell, I changed the oil and filter as it stank of petrol.

I changed all the injectors with a used set and only improved a bit. The next thing I found is there is a huge amount of vacuum in the crankcase, after the engine is running, I take off the oil filler cap and there's a huge hiss of suction of air going into the cam cover? It is a lot! When the engine is running and I have the filler cap off and put my hand over the hole, it almost feels like putting your hand on the top of a carb! Is too much vacuum is the crankcase dangerous?
I'm now thinking of putting a restrictor in the main feed to drop the crankcase vacuum. What should the vacuum the crankcase be?

I really am starting to pull my hair out!!!! I've actually been a bit stressed about this project as it's my commuter car, I've been with out it for 6 weeks now, one disappointment after another..

Oh, my electric steering doesn't work either.

[Edited on 17/7/16 by KFC]

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
adithorp

posted on 17/7/16 at 11:01 PM Reply With Quote
There shouldn't be vac' in the crankcase, it should be pressure. Vac' there is usually a fault in the crankcase vent' system (PCV valve in particular) giving you inlet vac' in the crankcase.





"A witty saying proves nothing" Voltaire

http://jpsc.org.uk/forum/

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
britishtrident

posted on 18/7/16 at 06:46 AM Reply With Quote
The one-way check valve for the brake servo is completely different from the the PCV valve, the PCV almost completely closes at the high engine valcuum at idle or on the over-run.
With a positive crankcase ventilation it is normal to have an air inlet some where on the engine valve cover or crankcase to allow air to circculate through the crank case back via the PCV back to the inlet.

Also connecting the PCV and the brake servo to the same connection is likely to eventually cause oil contamination of the brake servo.





[I] “ What use our work, Bennet, if we cannot care for those we love? .”
― From BBC TV/Amazon's Ripper Street.
[/I]

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
britishtrident

posted on 18/7/16 at 07:30 AM Reply With Quote
Re. one bank running rich, with this my first line of investigation is an electrical wiring problem, on a V engine bank 1 and bank 2 each have their own upstream oxygen sensor although they may often share a downstream sensor. If the PCM is controling the bank 1 injectors based on the bank 2 oxygen sensor signal and vice versa you will get the PCM driving one bank of injectors lean the other rich. This could be result of either the injector or sensor wiring getting swapped to the wrong side.

Other possible causes are an upstream oxygen sensors fault of some kind ie faulty sensor, bad wiring, wrong type of sensor or PCM problem.

Some on Japanese engines the PCM has an additional fuel trim based on the post-Cat oxygensor.

It would be easier to diagnose if you can see the fuel trims and O2 sensor signals.





[I] “ What use our work, Bennet, if we cannot care for those we love? .”
― From BBC TV/Amazon's Ripper Street.
[/I]

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
KFC

posted on 18/7/16 at 08:08 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by britishtrident
Re. one bank running rich, with this my first line of investigation is an electrical wiring problem, on a V engine bank 1 and bank 2 each have their own upstream oxygen sensor although they may often share a downstream sensor. If the PCM is controling the bank 1 injectors based on the bank 2 oxygen sensor signal and vice versa you will get the PCM driving one bank of injectors lean the other rich. This could be result of either the injector or sensor wiring getting swapped to the wrong side.

Other possible causes are an upstream oxygen sensors fault of some kind ie faulty sensor, bad wiring, wrong type of sensor or PCM problem.

Some on Japanese engines the PCM has an additional fuel trim based on the post-Cat oxygensor.

It would be easier to diagnose if you can see the fuel trims and O2 sensor signals.


Thanks for the reply.

It's non standard setup with one lambda on a after market ECU. I'll have a look at the values tonight but it has to go back to jamsport anyway because they made it far to rich, the exhaust made your eyes sting. I thought the injectors were too slow for the over demanding map?

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
r1_pete

posted on 18/7/16 at 11:55 AM Reply With Quote
Do you have the crankcase breather on the engine or air filter side of the throttle butterflies?
View User's Profile E-Mail User Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
adithorp

posted on 18/7/16 at 12:33 PM Reply With Quote
"...It has TB's on it and they charge up a resivoir for the brakes and crankcase..."

Didn't see this before (only saw it because of BT's post). As he says the brake servo master shouldn't be linked to the crank case vent. Depending on where it's all piped, it could be feeding crankcase gasses freely into one bank and causing that side to run weak. Lambda sees that and tries to compensate by overfueling. Sort the crank vents and it might well sort the misfire.





"A witty saying proves nothing" Voltaire

http://jpsc.org.uk/forum/

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
KFC

posted on 18/7/16 at 03:55 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by adithorp
"...It has TB's on it and they charge up a resivoir for the brakes and crankcase..."

Didn't see this before (only saw it because of BT's post). As he says the brake servo master shouldn't be linked to the crank case vent. Depending on where it's all piped, it could be feeding crankcase gasses freely into one bank and causing that side to run weak. Lambda sees that and tries to compensate by overfueling. Sort the crank vents and it might well sort the misfire.


Ok, the brakes are fed by the resivoir through a one way valve so no fluctuations there. I wanted to run one resivoir to try and balance all tb's.
I'll vent the crankcase now and see how that goes.

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member

New Topic New Poll New Reply


go to top






Website design and SEO by Studio Montage

All content © 2001-16 LocostBuilders. Reproduction prohibited
Opinions expressed in public posts are those of the author and do not necessarily represent
the views of other users or any member of the LocostBuilders team.
Running XMB 1.8 Partagium [© 2002 XMB Group] on Apache under CentOS Linux
Founded, built and operated by ChrisW.