fatboyfat7 wrote:How did the nct go? Did she pass?
As I expected, it failed on high idle emissions (3300rpm):
lambda: 1.017 - PASS (between 0.97 and 1.03)
CO 0.83 vol % - FAIL (above 0.3)
HC 246ppm - FAIL (above 200)
Mustangs recent results below for comparison:
Lambda 0.825 Pass criteria 0.97 to 1.03
CO 6.6 vol% Pass criteria below 0.3%
HC 243ppm Pass criteria below 200ppm
Everything else was spot on. More investigation required. My thoughts (bearing in mind TPS and IAT errors flagged):
1. Wiring \ earth \ continuity problem
2. Faulty MAF \ IAT
3. TPS out of tolerance (already swapped in second unit)
4. CAT matrix
Further reading re emissions
Interesting excerpt below:
During acceleration, the engine momentarily drops out of closed loop and receives a richer fuel mixture for more power. During this time (depending on the system), the MAP or Airflow Sensor and the TPS sensor play critical roles in controlling the fuel mixture.
Most fuel-injected engines have either a throttle position sensor or switch that indicates when the engine is at idle. When this device indicates that the engine is no longer at idle, the on time of the injectors is increased to temporarily richen the fuel mixture. The same thing happens any time the engine comes under load and manifold vacuum drops. The MAP sensor tells the computer the engine is under load, and the computer responds by adding more fuel.
It is normal to see some spikes in CO during acceleration, but unusually high CO readings indicates that the fuel mixture is too rich. Possible causes might include:
Flooded charcoal canister or a leaky purge valve;
Leaky power valve (older carbureted engines);
Defective mass airflow (MAF) sensor, manifold absolute pressure (MAP) sensor, or vane airflow meter (VAF); or
Defective throttle position sensor.
If the feedback fuel control system is working properly and there are no apparent sensor or purge valve problems, the catalytic converter may be contaminated or not functioning.
Elevated HC readings during acceleration indicate ignition misfire under load. The causes could be:
Defective knock sensor;
Weak ignition coil(s);
Excessive resistance in spark plug wires;
Arcing inside the distributor cap;
Worn, fouled or incorrectly gapped spark plugs;
Over-advanced ignition timing; or
Lean air/fuel mixture
CJ
Edit: Berno, I removed your post so as not to detract from the discussion...