<fake.TakeThisOut@me.com> wrote in
news:g24hni$d2u$1@grapevine.wam.umd.edu:
> This whole thing is very very sad.
Thank you for your empathy.
> I hesitate to say too
> much, because the most obvious comment is, the people who
> are alleged "mechanics" are plain and simple incompetent.
I have found this out, even though I have only owned 3 cars in
my life. I once had a VOLVO dealer set the idle on a Volvo stick
shift station wagon to 2000 RPM, so I had to step on the gas AND
on the brake to have it idle normally! The hills and mountains
were especially enjoyable!
> First off, if you have a very high CO level that indicates
> the car is running rich. A faulty distributor or ignition
> coil will not cause you to run rich. Faulty timing might
> if its EXTREMELY bad but thats detectable with a timing
> light.
The permissible aircheck CO level was just lowered from 2 to 1 -
6 months ago my car passed with flying colors. Now my CO
emission level was between 1.5 and 4.5 (per ?) depending on the
2000/4000 RPM readings and depending on whether the "mechanics"
who do these things here messed with the timing first. FWIW, it
was BETTER (under '2' /both/ RPM's) /before/ they slowed it
down!
Still, they ALL said I need a new 0² sensor, as the plug-in
scanner whose reading I /personally/ saw did. But my mechanic
said it was the coil - so I have a 3rd coil in 6 months or so. A
Temic (albeit a Mexican one as I assume the others were, but no
has said anything about that making them worthless) - which
impressed me - I had never heard of Temic let alone that it was
"the only coil to get" until Dave replied to me. OTOH, 3 Temics
in 6 months is NOT so impressive. OTOH, the original lasted over
12 years but who knows what THAT was and where it was made?
I am tempted to buy a real Bosch 0² sensor but my garage says
not to waste the money if the car runs OK. It will be cheaper
than taking it to a dealer for a (hopefully accurate) diagnostic
but at this point (see below) I am just going to wait until the
next disaster strikes.
The current situation is:
It ran GREAT for the first 5 miles after they put in the 3rd
coil and adjusted the AIV.
Then when I started it next day it started instantly (as it
ALWAYS has) but idled even MORE roughly than before! The needle
actually went down to 400 at one point! But it ran fine,
although I /fully/ expected total disaster at some point.
The next day it started, idled and ran just perfectly - and I
stopped and started about 4 or 5 times that day.
> I'd suspect a clogged fuel filter and/or the O2 sensor. A
> car with 30k miles on it shouldn't have a messed up O2
> sensor though.
Yes, I read they last 60K miles.
> On the other hand, driving a car 2300 miles
> a year is very tough on a car. Thats 44 miles per week.
Sometimes it's 10 miles a week, sometimes it's 80. There's
nothing I can do - I am not going to drive it just for the sake
of putting miles on it, right? I live in a huge city with
horrible traffic. It's hell.
As I said, I always warm it up and religiously change
oil/filters. It has always run perfectly well, and when I
started having some problems about a year ago, another garage
cleaned the injectors and a few other things. It was OK for a
few weeks, than it started up again.
I was recommended /this/ garage. They tuned it up, put Bosch
spark plugs in (Dave - I was wrong, Bosch, not Japanese, I
checked the invoice), new dist. cap and rotor, re-cleaned the
injectors, and a few other things (I am reasonably sure they
checked the fuel filter, which was changed a couple of years ago
anyway along with the fuel pump - original German pump was
installed [then THAT garage closed down, of course].).
Anyway, after these guys did all that, it ran better than it has
//EVER// run. (I have been driving it since the car was about 3
years old, for about 10 years now.)
> If you can get 400 miles on a tank, that means you are on
> average going at least 9 weeks between refuels.
The tank is about 15 gallons and I seem to get about 16-20 mpg.
It's always been that - AFAICT because since I drive it so
little I never paid much attention to the gas consumption.
It does vary, but I am sure I have gone 5-8 weeks with no
refill. The gas gauge is a little "moody", and it' not worth
getting into the tank to fix it. But I believe I get more like
200-250 miles per tank. I fill it up full every 100 miles or so
and it usually takes 4-5 gallons to get it full. I reset the
"trip meter" to judge when to fill up.
My garage told me I have to run about 150 miles on it before
they can do a new accurate scanner reading. That's how I knew
last week that I got about 20 mpg - I wrote down the numbers.
The BAD news is that was 90% on the freeway!!!!
> Gas does
> degrade, and humidity condenses in the gas tank which just
> sits there and nastifies your gas.
Well, I didn't know that, and it sounds bad, but short of
stuffing a petrol-resistant rubber bag inside the tank and
inflating it so the tank capacity is reduced to 5 gallons, what
can I do?
> That said, if it were me, I'd positively diagnose it, and
> if you can't do that,
*I* personally certainly can't do it. I have learned more about
this car in this thread than I ever knew before.
> take it to someone who is willing to,
> and not just throw parts at it, or guess about it because
> it will never get fixed that way, and you'll never be sure.
These ARE words of wisdom and I appreciate them.
AT /this/ moment it seems fine. Maybe the super-erratic idling
(which only happened once since the last service) was just the
new coil/AIV adjusting themselves to their "new home" (I know, I
sound like an idiot). If it screws up again, depending on what
my garage says THEN, I MAY bite the bullet and take it to a VW
dealer. If anyone can /positively/ diagnose it, /they/ should be
able to. It will probably cost me 1/8 the current worth of the
car, but that's still better than buying a new one.
> You can positively diagnose the problem if its a faulty
> sensor, period.
Well, as I said, a garage I happened to be passing by at the end
of a hellish day (and figured, what the hell, let's see what
/they/ say) did a scanner reading and it indicated the 0² sensor
as bad.
But MY garage said THEIR scanner indicated a faulty AIV, and
that they adjusted it and also put in a new coil (another
Mexican Temic) since the coil had just died at the same time,
more or less. (Good thing insurance includes towing.)
> BTW, Temic is a German company, as is Beru and Bosch, they
> are all completely separate companies.
Thanks, I got confused when Googling.
Thanks for your comments. I will keep you "posted".
Regards
vc
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