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vascott99 12-04-2015 07:10 PM

Spark Plugs
 
Evening all...

After a complete rebuild and new P/C with rings...I was doing my 500 mile break-in service and I was looking at my plugs and noticed that 6, 5, & 4 had a fair amount of carbon build up versus 1, 2, 3 which were fine.

My car ran a bit rich until I could tune the Air fuel which it did take multiple times with varying weather temps and finding out I had a bad fuel relay.

I cleaned them up and I should have taken a photo.

I am using Bosch W4CS and set at .07m


Why one side

Trak Ratt 12-04-2015 07:21 PM

Ignition comes to mind if the spark is weak. Turbo car, right? Could the other bank's intake rubbers be bad? They could be running lean.

hoophead 12-04-2015 09:59 PM

Cam timing - easy enough to check when you readjust the valves at 1K or so.

RV4Flyer 12-05-2015 06:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Trak Ratt (Post 541866)
Ignition comes to mind if the spark is weak. Turbo car, right? Could the other bank's intake rubbers be bad? They could be running lean.

Carbon fouled plugs are due to a rich (too much air) not lean mixture. I'm not familiar with the engine but by adjusting the mixture you probably fixed the issue. If not it sounds like it may be uneven air/fuel distribution or an intake manifold leak. What is the cylinder layout on the engine? All even on one side and odd on the other?

vascott99 12-05-2015 08:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RV4Flyer (Post 541883)
Carbon fouled plugs are due to a rich (too much air) not lean mixture. I'm not familiar with the engine but by adjusting the mixture you probably fixed the issue. If not it sounds like it may be uneven air/fuel distribution or an intake manifold leak. What is the cylinder layout on the engine? All even on one side and odd on the other?


I replaced the manifolds and gaskets..and torqued them to speck and rechecked..

Could my spark plug wire set for that side be going bad..

Dandelion 12-05-2015 09:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RV4Flyer (Post 541883)
Carbon fouled plugs are due to a rich (too much air) not lean mixture.

Uh....rich = too much air? On what planet?

ed

RV4Flyer 12-05-2015 09:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Varejao17 (Post 541892)
Uh....rich = too much air? On what planet?

ed

.
Opps, meant to say fuel not air. Brain moving faster than my fingers. A better description would be a higher fuel to air ratio than optimal. Good catch.

ChaosRogue 12-07-2015 08:44 AM

My guess was also a fuel/air ratio issue on that bank. Are you running the CIS, or have you put an EFI setup on it?

jbailey930 12-07-2015 10:28 AM

very strange as you are stock CIS -- from the manual --

'The CIS air flow sensor plate measures the amount of air that is being drawn into the system. This sensor plate is attached to a fuel distributor that evenly meters the amount of pressurized fuel sent to each injector. The system doesn't differentiate among the six injectors: it sends the same amount of fuel to them at all times. Unlike pulsed-injection systems like the Motronic system or even the earlier Mechanical Fuel Injection system, the CIS injectors distribute fuel to the cylinders at all times. The opening and closing of the intake valves controls the intake of fuel into and out of the combustion chamber.

Through 1979, CIS was a semi-open-looped system, which means that it didn't monitor the output gases from the engine to see if the air/fuel mixture was set at the appropriate levels. In 1980, emissions requirements forced the introduction of an oxygen sensor into the system, which helped the engine to better run at the appropriate mixture level through the regulation of fuel pressure inside the fuel distributor.

ChaosRogue 12-07-2015 02:55 PM

Hmmm...Weird. Maybe something in the lines? Past that, I've got nothing. Good luck, and let me know if you do find out what it is. I'd like to avoid (or at least more quickly figure out) any issues with my car.


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