geofffinlay wrote:.
I think it's very kind of you to defend someone you don't have any connection with (that's your age sneaking through), but that's the ONLY thing so far that you and I disagree on. From my perspective he's being just plain RUDE. (CAPS are for emphasis - I'm not yelling).
*By the way, you owe us a write-up to test the BC Solenoid
I'm OK, you're OK too - just a couple of old farts!
Geoff
Geoff,
Let me reword a sentence I was about to edit to a better precision...
I AM a party to your frustration, just not a party to its cause. My expression of it usually begins with "These kids nowadays......"
It is evident that you are a Type A and I am a Type A. More akin to giving orders than taking them. So we're going to butt heads. But that's OK, because you are a straight forward man, and behave accordingly. I don't have a need to "get along" with someone and can still respect them.
I do take exception to your misguided defense of fatcat, and the indefensible. In direct quote under my name he wrote:
"Yes, we do...like back pressure readings...where are those numbers?
You can priech(sic) all day long, but without test RESULTS, nothing matters!"
He is so uninformed and so bent for a good harassment, he did not realize it was not my car, nor my problem at hand. The "You" could have only been me. That i don't respect, nor will I put up with it.
In regard to fatcat's rant on the MAP sensor, I can leave that in the hands of Mechanical Mike and others of vetted high technical regard. The "MAP/BARO" designation is an artifact of the Series I and is not mentioned in 1500 pages of my 1998 GM Factory Service Manual - H Platform. It IS mentioned that the "MAP" sensor does take a barometric pressure, but only at ignition, and initialization of WOT. The two sensors have exactly the same pressure line input. One translates that into voltage for the PCM, the other translates it into voltage to drive an analog gauge.
I consider fatcat's unvetted tortured logic and fallacy to argument pales in a simple presentation. A presentation to which wilwren was present. With his 60,000 posts, obvious commitment to the discipline of an engineer, and years leading this site... I doubt he would leave something knowably incorrect to go unmarked. If something further has been determined, then so be it. But we go on best information available. I repeat this link for the third time... hoping that time will be taken to actually look at the photo.
http://www.pontiacbonnevilleclub.com/fo ... uge#p37201
In what will definitely be my final thoughts for this group....
I have been attempting to problem-solve based on the diagnosis diagram on Page 6-655 of the aforementioned FSM noted as "Loss of Power, Sluggishness". We have covered fuel pressure and fuel trims. We lacked direct data on the EGR. The activity of the pindle would have given us an idea if there was a back pressure issue, or the EGR was the problem itself.
Contrary to my recommendation, the crotchety 02 sensors, and the S2 O2 sensor DTC have been ignored. I was the one who originally asked for the the MAF and MAP readings, and that request lost momentum because the validity of the MAF vs RPMs was questioned. This when all we needed to know, was the air volume going in, commensurate with the pressure seen at the MAP sensor. After I (alone) took the time to analyze the data, then we either had a cause or effect situation with the manifold pressure.
At that point, we should evaluate the MAP sensor. As I was under the impression our in-need poster didn't have the meter to do that, I skipped to the Boost Control Actuator and the Boost Control Solenoid. Frankly, his explanation actually indicated questionable results. But I knew it would still show up, if I proceeded with the Solenoid.
When I need information from my senior managers, they either give it to me or tell me when they will have it to me. They "owe" me something because I make sure they get paid every two weeks. Geoff, I don't "owe" you anything because you don't pay me and you are not one of my customers. The only time I would "owe" it to you, is if I failed to deliver it on time. That failure is impossible, because the "when" I pointed out, is only after I had written it up. And there are about 1,000 things ahead of you in the line of important things in my life.
See i told you we would butt heads.
My suggestion is that you write it up. I also suggest get somebody to him with a decent scantool and multimeter. You will also need to tell him which MAP is which (cause that's next, if the boost solenoid is OK). I would be happy to do it if he is in the Phila metro area.
You also might consider your approach with a person 1,000 miles away, who has limited knowledge, limited tools, very limited problem-solving experience, and no FSM. The "what" is easy. But you have to tell them "how' to do it. Or figure out something, so you can know the "what" for him. And I am sure that has nothing to do with an "oscilloscope" which you referenced before.
My recommendation is that you somehow secure an FSM or Document ID# 47530. The section is titled
Boost Control System Check. It's several pages long and has 22 steps.
(Hold on, I almost did a fatcat flipout)
On second thought, I will meet my ethical obligation to l67poweredlss and PM my 10 minute test to him, with my recommendations for the possible outcomes. Like everybody else, he's probably workin' his butt off to put food in his mouth or on the table. And things can't be spectacular for him if he is putting hundreds of dollars into a car, which he has little chance of getting back in the open market. (At least according to Edmunds, in my area $1572) My approach was attempting to get him through this without a million dollar workup. Autozone or somebody reading the EGR, could tell him what probability there is for the cost of a backpressure test. That's the FSM speaking to probabilities, not me.
Best of luck with your problem-solving, I know you'll do great. And I'll be looking forward to posts on your progress with your Lotus Super 7 replicar.
Charlie