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Hi all — long-time viewer of Eric’s videos (first brake job I ever did :)) and now could definitely use some assistance with my 1994 Buick Roadmaster (Sedan, 156,000 miles, automatic transmission — one of the B-bodies with the LT1). I am nearly to the end of my “expertise” and starting to get worried. It is running rough and experiencing a lack of power at higher speeds and when hot.
I tried to organize this into two parts…the first section (1-7) is the symptoms and behavior with a bad fuel pump giving 18 PSI, and the second section (8-13) is the symptoms and behavior with a good fuel pump giving 40+ PSI. You might just be able to read the second section (8-13) and figure it out right away but I included 1-7 incase it helps…some problems were more pronounced with the bad pump. Sorry for so much text — hard for me to tell what is important or not, and I do not want to accidentally exclude something which means absolutely nothing to me but the world to any mechanic.
I also included some audio of how the car sounds when stopped in different gears (see #12, below…this is when it had the bad fuel pump) and with the AC on and off. It sounds the same with the new fuel pump but a bit richer and harder to hear clearly.
With bad fuel pump, 17-18 PSI instead of required 41-47 PSI:
- Two weeks ago I came to a firm stop and Code 44 (lean exhaust condition, left side of engine) SES came on about 30 seconds later. I could effectively prevent the SES by giving the engine an extra 100 RPM every 35 seconds (code remained, just no SES). The engine was rougher and had less power when this code was lurking, even if not on. Worse when hot, MPG over that 4-day period was near 15 and usually is 19-23. On the last trip I took (highway) I got a “too good to be true” 24 MPG. Engine compartment SEEMED 20-30 degrees hotter than usual, could be my imagination.
- O2 sensor tested bad so replaced it and spark plugs (going to OEM plugs away from double-platinums), and did elective maintenance of new plug wires, two new vacuum lines, oil change and replacing the second O2 sensor. Accidentally misrouted two spark plug wires on the right side of engine during this time and drove it for about a mile that way before identifying and fixing. “Knock sensor circuit short” code 43 came on after idling for a bit a few hours later, no pinging or knocking so decided to ignore it for now since knock sensor wiring looked good and it drove quite well. (Stupid risk, I learned afterward.)
- Car drove better than I have ever seen for about a mile (“fixed!”), then roughness came back gradually over a 16 mile period. If you have ever tried to hold a spinning washing machine still with your hands and felt the force push on your hands on each rotation of the washing machine – it felt like the engine was doing that when I gave it gas. Subsequent “hold brake/push gas” tests had the same feeling even with the small amount of gas I provided the system. I pulled over and spun the knock sensor wiring around and the car drove much better, but still rougher than before the maintenance (see #2 above). I think this better performance was due to letting it cool down, not spinning the knock sensor wiring.
- When I would come to a stop, for the last 6 MPH of slowing the engine would begin threatening to die as if it were running on fumes. When I was fully stopped it would continue this chugging, and when taking off it continued until – I think around 10 MPH. With the AC off it barely did this at all and was almost smooth, and in neutral or park it was nearly smooth. AC on/off had no impact after it was at 10+ MPH.
- The next morning I found that it ran better (still rough but not scary). I found out that it lacked power, and all of this felt like what I know of vacuum symptoms, so I double checked everything. The check valves to the distributor were reversed (we replaced that vacuum line); car drove really great again (“fixed!”) for maybe half a mile, then became rough again. The knock sensor code was gone at the next startup and no codes since then.
- I discovered that as the car gets hotter, it starts having a severe lack of power and runs rougher. (RPM the same.) At seeming random I could smell exhaust.
- Drove it back to my work area which is about 30 miles away. This trip was similar to #3, above, but this time it started out bad and became horrifically bad after around 12 miles – the spinning washing machine was back. Pulled over, tested fuel pressure with the gauge I bought. 12 PSI key on/engine off, should have 41+. It was 17-18 PSI when started, and it dipped by 1 PSI each time the engine felt rough.
- Installed new fuel pump (ScannerDanner’s hour-long video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RyEPOeQB0Zg did the trick even with just a volt meter, great reference!). New filters and old one was clogged. Fuel pressure regulator and overall pressure test out fine now.
- Now when the engine is cold, or at lower speeds, I have great power, but the rough engine operation is still there and seems rougher. Once I get up to 50 MPH+ I begin experiencing the same lack of power behavior as before the pump replacement. With the new pump I can at least accelerate to some degree but it is still extremely weak once hot / up to speed.
- I discovered that now, if I give it a good amount of gas at higher speeds, it will go into passing gear where it smooths out quite a bit. I still do not have power in passing gear but it feels smoother.
- The car now wants to die the last 3 MPH of coming to a stop instead of the last 6 MPH, but now it runs rough at idle instead of the “running on fumes, going to die” condition it had in #4, above. Same when accelerating, it acts like it wants to die until it is at 5 MPH or so then switches to just being rough (before, this “change” occurred at 10 MPH). If I just give it some gas it responds right away even if it is at 1 MPH. It seems like the engine has the same “rhythm” as it had before the fuel pump replacement, even though it is not threatening to die now when stopped in drive or reverse. I do not know what a misfire is for certain, but if you told me it causes the engine to skip a beat every time it hit that cylinder, I would say yes sir, that seems to be occurring. If you turn the AC on/off it now has no impact at all, as well.
- I uploaded audio to YouTube of how the engine sounds (near the end of the audio I give it some gas): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qPwhqJgNCXI&feature=youtu.be You may be able to pick out an “exhaust-leak-like” clicky sound. Listening with my stethoscope’s cone attachment, the exhaust-leak sound occurs along the length of the exhaust pipe. If I use the metal rod attachment I can also hear it occurring along the length of the exhaust pipe. This was not present before the work in #2, above, and it does not occur on the right side of the engine. Maybe this is a problem because the right side doesn’t have it or maybe this is a problem because the left side does, not sure.
- I no longer seem to smell exhaust, but maybe this is because I have not done any city driving yet.
Now, after the fuel pump replacement…
I think that is all…any advice or thoughts would be greatly appreciated. It seems overwhelming to me – but if I do not discover a problem with the work done in #2 above I am leaning toward EGR valve. If this is stuck open or in some other way malfunctioning, from what I understand it would explain the extra engine heat (despite the temperature gauge reading normal) and the poor performance at higher speeds / when hot in addition to explaining the fuel economy issue. It could also explain the exhaust smell every so often…
Other test items on my list aside from EGR:
• Drive with the pressure gauge on…see if it loses pressure when accelerating under load.
• Visually check (again) for any spark arcing.
• Test EGR valve. I am not sure what type it is, but I have tests for all three types and identification information once I read the part number on it. It is quick to test this so doing it first.
• Quick test of MAF by unplugging it. If no difference, investigate further.
• In-line spark plug tester, make sure all have strong spark (and I guess different coloring, too?) at different RPMs
• Remove boot from each plug (I’ll be doing this anyways during the in-line test) and see if it impacts engine RPM/sounds differently than the others. I may pick up an IR thermometer as well to see if a cylinder is colder or hotter than others.
• Examine vacuum lines AGAIN, take each one off and feel for suction continuity…lightly zip tie the ones I have looked at to be 100% sure I am keeping track. Disconnect lines entirely and see how it runs. No difference should indicate a big problem somewhere which I am somehow missing.
• Remove all spark plugs, look for fouled ends, cracked ceramic, check any for bad gaps or damaged tips.
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