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HybridZ

Almost finished and the Z won't start!


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That's fuel or timing... Check your plugs to see if they are fouled/ wet with fuel...It's no longer an electrical issue in my mind.

 

You could also get a buddy to crank it while you move the distributor slowly and in small incriments. Or get a remote starter switch from sears for $40.

Mike

 

Thats what we did yesterday to get it to actually fire up. I just have 2 variables that are unknown, which are the timing and fuel pressure. I'll check the plugs and it probly isn't a bad idea to replace them either.

 

On a side note, I plan to goto the EAST COAST Z and hopefully pick up another N47 head and work it abit, because I just started school again and I plan to rebuild the motor, and my head has seen better days anyway-so I'm gonna start from scratch.

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UPDATE, the Z is back up and running, this time is stays running. It was grounding issues that caused the problem. Now it runs and all, but if I put it in gear it goes, but only up untill a certain RPM, and then I get a bad miss, what do you think the problem would be? Too little fuel? Too much timing?

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Everything is back together, engine wise atleast. No headlights or any other lighting, but the engine is back together completly. It acts the same as before I rebuilt it, and that was because of a vaccum leak where the intake bolted to the head. No leaks anymore, atleast no obvious ones. When I dissconnect the BOV, and just leave the vaccum line open, causing a leak, it still runs the same. I think the BOV might be one of the problems, its a Greddy Type S, which is the replacement for the stock DSM one, but I have it vented to the atmosphere, and I believe its SUPPOSED to leak boost at idle? Could this give me a similar symptom that a vaccum leak would, since technically leaking boost would be a vaccum leak?

 

There is still a bit more tuning with the fuel pressure and timing, but atleast its running. Or should I say was running, I somehow fried a wire for the coil, so I had to jump the coil to keep it going.

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I'm not a turbo car expert but it seems to me that if you have a boost leak after the AFM then the engine woud run rich not lean. This is because the AFM measures a given amount of air entering the intake but less than that is actually getting into the cylinders, at least under boost. A vacuum leak would be just the opposite as more air is drawn in through the leak than is measured.

 

Could your fuel pump or APR be causing a fuel supply problem at higher RPMs which in turn causes the lean condition?

 

It might still be an electrical problem causing a weak spark at higher RPMs.

 

Do yo uhave a way to measure your air/fuel ratio?

 

Wheelman

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Its hard to say, I'm guessing that the fuel pressure and timing will make it run pretty good at idle and such because I may have the fuel pressure tuned to work with that leak at idle. But once the rpms change about 200rpm, the leak is getting worse, and therefor throwing off the a/f ratio that seems good at idle. Does this make any sense to anybody, it makes perfect sense to me.

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