This has included various misfires as well as a performance issue. Much work has been done by Phil Webb at SWLC and last year I think he finally fixed the sporadic misfire - I benefitted from him swapping out all sorts of components and then replaceing the originals when the fault resurfaced. So I've been pleased to have had no stutters for the last few '00 miles. Sadly there is still an issue, but one very hard to reproduce, particularly on the open road. On the road - if I can find the right place/conditions to put the car under strain for a while, I can feel a loss of top end shove at high revs. The car is still quick, but just not as quick as I know it should be. There are no fault codes produced. At Castle Combe this year, the track conditions meant I could drive the the car into a fault condition. The car would be perfect after the warm up lap for a couple at full chat. But as it got further into the session I lost some top end - fast to 80-90 then just wouldn't go higher despite boost still at around .9 (Everest programme). Then on lap 5 or 6 I'd get a big pop, sometimes two, (like a backfire) and the CEL would come on. I'd obviously lift and within a few seconds the CEL would go off....but if I resumed it would happen again.
For the last run of the day RonR leant me his data logger and later (below) posted the file. On the run in the attached file the first few laps were on 6 Everest (no pops but I lost top end) - then switched to 5 (Kilimanjaro?) and got the pops on the second (which was my last) lap. Grateful for any pointers on what might be happening.
RonR wrote:MPx wrote:Well despite polishing up my credentials as a complete knob...not least by running over the great and good by starting the car while stood beside it - forgetting it was in gear - Doh!I had a great day!! Only possible of course by the company of so many of LEC (and indeed other clubs) and the tremendous help everyone gave me. Special thanks as ever to Pinky for actually working on the car to replace the wastegate acutator pipe and Ron for fitting his data logger for my final run and then studying the Elanscan file - just a shame the computer basically appeared to have recorded that the car was working OK. Well it was most of the time and gave me some great laps but just not as many as I'm used to! Many thanks one and all - greatly enjoyed.
Here's the ElanScan file for further diagnosis. There's a climbing Knock count, an Overboost later on in the run, and a Prom error which could be the mountain switcher doing something untoward. The PromID appears to be 599?
A chance duscussion with Ray at Silverstone led me to question the CTS
MPx wrote:
I realise that this is happening in the wrong thread, but its where it is so I'm continuing unless it can be stripped out somehow. I'm still getting top end issues once the car is hot, and my instinct is that it may be overfuelling. Spoke to Ray about it at Silverstone yesterday and he suggested Coolant Temp Sensor having seen other posts on here. I've searched them now too and it appears to be a possibility. Before I ask SWLC to change the sensor, I thought I'd check here. Am I right in thinking this Graph from the run that RonR captured for me looks like the sensor isn't reading right - it covers 6 laps of Combe? tia
Joao wasn't convinced...
Tuga2112 wrote:certainly others will know better than me. however i shall be dropping my ignorant opinion regarless.
if i recall correctly, the thermostat opens at 93 but thats a mechanical thing. so. not necessarily the most accurate. BUT
your temperature ranges from 89 to 109 and this according to your message is within running laps in a circuit.
for a pressurised system. i would assume the readings your getting are reasonble and if i had no input from anyone else. i would be looking elsewhere for the problem your describing...
but lucky for you... you dont need to rely on my ignorance. and you can wait for some real knowledge on the matter![]()
id be curious to know what is happening to your machine.
MPx wrote:Interesting thoughts Joao. It seems very odd to me that I go on track and do a warm up lap - maybe 120sec then do a couple of hards which for me at Combe in the M100 are about 95secs, and then I start to loose power and can no longer maintain the pace. I'd have thought the temp would climb (maybe higher than normal) and then stay there. What would cause it to drop at all if I'm still trying?
Tuga2112 wrote:Tuga2112 wrote:if i recall correctly, the thermostat opens at 93 but thats a mechanical thing. so. not necessarily the most accurate.
i would assume the termostat in your car is opening a little higher than the intended temperture. we know the elan was tested in death valey desert, although i dont know details about the weather there, im pretty sure a car tested in those conditions will have perfectly adequate cooling design to handle a trackday in british weather.
but ignoring that (again based on ignorance) opinion. have you ever noticed how slowly you need to be driving after being standing still to lower the temperature of your coolant from the fans being on to normal operating temperature ? Ive been in queues in motorway when the fans turn on and as soon as i get the chance to drive at 20mph the needle drops to normal operating tempoerature in less than a mile.
althought i already said it. im just going to repeat this to be sure you take my words with a grain of salt. but this is just ignorant opinions on the topic based on my understanding and experiences with the car.
the most i can help you at this point is to highlight what i would be doing if i was in your position. the figures from that graph dont appear to me unusually high readings from the sensor. BUT you can check the engine manual to see if theres any information there about what the ECU expects the Temperature sensor to report within limits. and maybe even see if it enters some kind of limp mode due to it.
just to give you an idea of the type of idiot your talking to, the following is just an extract of what i was typing and the thoughts in my head
"one thing that came to mind just now is that the secondary throtle may be one of those things that only operates at higher revs ? i think its operated by vacuum, but maybe if the boost pressure is too high it could work the line free? .... but then again, that would induce a vaccum leak which would be always present afterwards..... so i probably should delete this sentence now "
whats the readings of the MAP over that run ? a bad reading from that would make the ECU think theres not enough or too much boost and over/under deliver fuel.
also, this is a issue i had very recently on my 4runner... the TPS was not tight and after a certain amount of throtle it moved with the throthle... which made the car perform in a very weird manner, but certainly very underpowered.. just something worth checking i guess.
Then Phil chipped in on another thread....
lotusflasherman wrote:I had problems with a CTS many years ago and been looking through my notes I made, before there was the useful page on WikiLEC. http://wikilec.com/view/CTS
It is a thermistor, which is 'electrical engineer speak' for 'thermal resistor' meaning a resistance that changes with temperature.
If you have a simple multi-meter with ohms scale the key information, easy to check, is : in iced water it should be about 8k ohms, in boiling water 185 ohms.
They are fairly robust and not prone to changing values, just stop working. Mine went open circuit, so very high resistance (infinity is high) so ECU thought engine was cold. It was fine on first start up but soon too rich as the engine warmed up. (I found an old volume control 'pot' that covered the approximate range so 'lashed up' a manual adjustment until a new CTS could be purchased and fitted.)
I'd be very interested to see the graph from MPX with his new CTS fitted. On track, a full throttle blast down the straight will generate a lot of heat in the head so CTS will then read high, braking and part throttle will allow it to reduce, then high again for blast down the next straight. The graph covers 1000 seconds so 16 mins 40 seconds and range approaching 110°C doesn't surprise me - that's why the system is pressurised, to elevate boiling point ... 15 psi elevates it to 125°C. You get more power at higher temperature, particularly with cold air, which is more dense. Variation for 110° to 90° is within my expected range. BTW I run on an Everest chip and a diesel Astra thermostat which opens about 5°higher than the OE 'stat.
If you do the boiling water / iced water check and figures are about right I'd try a new thermostat before replacing the CTS. Thermostats can get a bit sluggish and not fully open - I usually check mine boiling it up in a saucepan - but only when my wife is out ..
MPx wrote:lotusflasherman wrote:I'd be very interested to see the graph from MPX with his new CTS fitted.
Thanks Phil, and so would I. Two issues are 1: I can only generate the symptoms in track conditions not the public roads - I will do a public road run to see what happens but it wont be conclusive whatever the result. 2: I'm currently in a Covid household and went positive myself on Sunday so I'm grounded anyway!lotusflasherman wrote:On track, a full throttle blast down the straight will generate a lot of heat in the head so CTS will then read high, braking and part throttle will allow it to reduce, then high again for blast down the next straight. The graph covers 1000 seconds so 16 mins 40 seconds and range approaching 110°C doesn't surprise me - that's why the system is pressurised, to elevate boiling point ... 15 psi elevates it to 125°C. You get more power at higher temperature, particularly with cold air, which is more dense. Variation for 110° to 90° is within my expected range.
And thanks again and very much chimes with Joao's expected variation as he told me on the Castle Combe thread. On the other hand...That graph isn't going up and down between corners and straights. Its slightly under a 100s lap for me if I'm trying - clearly not when I'm coasting if its gone bang - but anyway the temp warms up over the first lap or two then drops like a stone for a couple of laps then reverses again so these are more than whole lap swings. The symptoms start on about lap 4 and terminal on 5 and 6. Also very recent advice from Phil Webb at SWLC was that once the car is properly warm and thermostat open then temp should be stable and vary by very few degrees no matter how hard its used (obvs excluding traffic issues etc - and there weren't any!).
Anyway, I'll get my new graph and post it in my own new thread, and migrate all the other posts there too so that I stop hyjacking other's threads.....sorry!