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  • in reply to: 1998 Civic EX (auto) no start #524938
    angelangel
    Participant

      my car does same thing, the shift stick or/ won’t go into gear. The car won’t start at all. The wheel will locked. I have to push it gear hard it place or move the wheel adjuster till it pop & unlock. The problem that caused this a stretched wire in the gear shift. hope this helps.

      in reply to: How does alcohol damage engines? #527910
      angelangel
      Participant

        Moonshine It’s Not

        That 90:10 mixture of gasoline and alcohol is referred to as E10, while a different blend of 15 percent gas and 85 percent alcohol is sold regionally as E85. On this scale, straight petroleum-based gasoline is referred to as E0. Most gasoline dispensed from pumps in this country is as much as 10 percent ­ethanol, distilled from corn grown in the Midwest. This alcoholic cocktail was originally mandated by the EPA as a replacement for MTBE (methyl tertiary butyl ether), an oxygen-bearing petroleum-sourced chemical that was added to pump gasoline starting in 1979 to reduce carbon monoxide emissions in some regions that had problems meeting government air-quality standards. The oxygen in the MTBE (and ethanol) molecules can substantially reduce CO emissions in vehicles without modern closed-loop fuel-injection systems, which were introduced ­starting in the ’80s.

        Soon after, MTBE started turning up in groundwater, affecting the taste and smell of drinking water, so ethanol was substituted. (Shockingly, MTBE isn’t considered toxic or even carcinogenic in the concentrations found in groundwater, but still.)

        However: If the beneficial effects of oxygenated fuel have largely been bypassed by modern feedback-loop injection systems, which control the air-to-fuel ratio much more closely, why is ethanol still in your fuel? Because the second President Bush made a decision to offset some of our dependence on foreign oil with domestically produced alcohol, and the Corn Belt senators agreed. Ethanol plants have mushroomed, ramping up U.S. production from 1.77 billion gallons in 2001 to 10.75 billion gallons in 2009. Politics aside, odds are near 100 percent that there’s as much as 10 percent alcohol in the gasoline you’re pumping into your car and that 5-gallon can you use to fuel all your other gas engines.

        Read more: E15 and Engines – Can Ethanol Damage my Engine – Popular Mechanics
        Follow us: @PopMech on Twitter | popularmechanics on Facebook
        Visit us at PopularMechanics.com

        in reply to: How does alcohol damage engines? #524921
        angelangel
        Participant

          Moonshine It’s Not

          That 90:10 mixture of gasoline and alcohol is referred to as E10, while a different blend of 15 percent gas and 85 percent alcohol is sold regionally as E85. On this scale, straight petroleum-based gasoline is referred to as E0. Most gasoline dispensed from pumps in this country is as much as 10 percent ­ethanol, distilled from corn grown in the Midwest. This alcoholic cocktail was originally mandated by the EPA as a replacement for MTBE (methyl tertiary butyl ether), an oxygen-bearing petroleum-sourced chemical that was added to pump gasoline starting in 1979 to reduce carbon monoxide emissions in some regions that had problems meeting government air-quality standards. The oxygen in the MTBE (and ethanol) molecules can substantially reduce CO emissions in vehicles without modern closed-loop fuel-injection systems, which were introduced ­starting in the ’80s.

          Soon after, MTBE started turning up in groundwater, affecting the taste and smell of drinking water, so ethanol was substituted. (Shockingly, MTBE isn’t considered toxic or even carcinogenic in the concentrations found in groundwater, but still.)

          However: If the beneficial effects of oxygenated fuel have largely been bypassed by modern feedback-loop injection systems, which control the air-to-fuel ratio much more closely, why is ethanol still in your fuel? Because the second President Bush made a decision to offset some of our dependence on foreign oil with domestically produced alcohol, and the Corn Belt senators agreed. Ethanol plants have mushroomed, ramping up U.S. production from 1.77 billion gallons in 2001 to 10.75 billion gallons in 2009. Politics aside, odds are near 100 percent that there’s as much as 10 percent alcohol in the gasoline you’re pumping into your car and that 5-gallon can you use to fuel all your other gas engines.

          Read more: E15 and Engines – Can Ethanol Damage my Engine – Popular Mechanics
          Follow us: @PopMech on Twitter | popularmechanics on Facebook
          Visit us at PopularMechanics.com

          in reply to: How does alcohol damage engines? #527908
          angelangel
          Participant

            popular science says:

            Other Alcohol Issues

            Alcohol is corrosive and can degrade plastic, rubber or even metal parts in the fuel system that weren’t engineered to use alcohol-bearing fuel. Consequently, that antique Evinrude outboard or ’60s lawn tractor you bought at the swap meet might need some upgrading to stay together on today’s gas. That means corrosion-resistant tanks, alcohol-tolerant rubber lines, seals and fuel-pump diaphragms, and plastic fuel-system parts that won’t swell up in the presence of alcohol. Vintage boats with internal fiberglass tanks often have issues with the coating inside the tank failing, ­sometimes requiring massive structural modifications. Highly tuned two-stroke engines will run leaner (and consequently hotter) on the lower Btu/gallon alcohol mix, potentially leading to melted pistons and scuffed cylinder walls. Alcohol will also scour varnish and deposits out of the fuel system that have remained in place for years, which will eventually wind up in the filter or main jet, choking off the engine’s fuel supply. Worse yet, the alcohol itself ­oxidizes in the tank and produces a tenacious brown glop that’s far more damaging to fuel systems than the ­varnish we’re used to seeing in pure petroleum fuels. In warmer weather, you can see varnish starting to form within a month of dispensing fresh fuel into a vehicle tank or storage can.

            Advice

            The common question I get: Where can I buy alcohol-free gasoline? You probably can’t, except at a very few stations, and odds are it’s very expensive high-octane racing fuel that’s not legal for road use.

            To avoid phase separation, avoid long-term fuel storage. Trash that old 5-gallon can with the rag stuffed into the filler neck and trade up to a 2-gallon can with a decent, vented cap. I used to recommend storing outdoor power equipment, boats, ATVs and motorcycles with full tanks to prevent rusting. Now I recommend draining the tank, running the engine till it quits and then fogging the inside of the tank and the cylinder with oil to prevent corrosion. No E10 in the tank equals no water absorption and no phase separation.

            We’ve always recommended using fuel-stabilizer products for gas-powered vehicles or tools that aren’t regularly used. E10 makes that advice even more compelling. We’ve tried products formulated for blended gasoline from Star Tron, Eastwood and Sta-Bil. There are others. Beware of products that claim to prevent phase separation: It’s unlikely that they can eliminate the phenomenon, although some products do claim to delay it.

            Read more: E15 and Engines – Can Ethanol Damage my Engine – Popular Mechanics
            Follow us: @PopMech on Twitter | popularmechanics on Facebook
            Visit us at PopularMechanics.com

            in reply to: How does alcohol damage engines? #524919
            angelangel
            Participant

              popular science says:

              Other Alcohol Issues

              Alcohol is corrosive and can degrade plastic, rubber or even metal parts in the fuel system that weren’t engineered to use alcohol-bearing fuel. Consequently, that antique Evinrude outboard or ’60s lawn tractor you bought at the swap meet might need some upgrading to stay together on today’s gas. That means corrosion-resistant tanks, alcohol-tolerant rubber lines, seals and fuel-pump diaphragms, and plastic fuel-system parts that won’t swell up in the presence of alcohol. Vintage boats with internal fiberglass tanks often have issues with the coating inside the tank failing, ­sometimes requiring massive structural modifications. Highly tuned two-stroke engines will run leaner (and consequently hotter) on the lower Btu/gallon alcohol mix, potentially leading to melted pistons and scuffed cylinder walls. Alcohol will also scour varnish and deposits out of the fuel system that have remained in place for years, which will eventually wind up in the filter or main jet, choking off the engine’s fuel supply. Worse yet, the alcohol itself ­oxidizes in the tank and produces a tenacious brown glop that’s far more damaging to fuel systems than the ­varnish we’re used to seeing in pure petroleum fuels. In warmer weather, you can see varnish starting to form within a month of dispensing fresh fuel into a vehicle tank or storage can.

              Advice

              The common question I get: Where can I buy alcohol-free gasoline? You probably can’t, except at a very few stations, and odds are it’s very expensive high-octane racing fuel that’s not legal for road use.

              To avoid phase separation, avoid long-term fuel storage. Trash that old 5-gallon can with the rag stuffed into the filler neck and trade up to a 2-gallon can with a decent, vented cap. I used to recommend storing outdoor power equipment, boats, ATVs and motorcycles with full tanks to prevent rusting. Now I recommend draining the tank, running the engine till it quits and then fogging the inside of the tank and the cylinder with oil to prevent corrosion. No E10 in the tank equals no water absorption and no phase separation.

              We’ve always recommended using fuel-stabilizer products for gas-powered vehicles or tools that aren’t regularly used. E10 makes that advice even more compelling. We’ve tried products formulated for blended gasoline from Star Tron, Eastwood and Sta-Bil. There are others. Beware of products that claim to prevent phase separation: It’s unlikely that they can eliminate the phenomenon, although some products do claim to delay it.

              Read more: E15 and Engines – Can Ethanol Damage my Engine – Popular Mechanics
              Follow us: @PopMech on Twitter | popularmechanics on Facebook
              Visit us at PopularMechanics.com

              in reply to: help major leaking #527888
              angelangel
              Participant

                Ur right, I took to a mechanic for advice. It was leak behind the engine block, making think it was a freeze plug. But the mechanic saw the broken heat pump where u describe. I was told u had remove the intake manifold & starter to get to it. thanks again.:)

                in reply to: help major leaking #524899
                angelangel
                Participant

                  Ur right, I took to a mechanic for advice. It was leak behind the engine block, making think it was a freeze plug. But the mechanic saw the broken heat pump where u describe. I was told u had remove the intake manifold & starter to get to it. thanks again.:)

                  in reply to: help major leaking #527741
                  angelangel
                  Participant

                    I found out how to replace them. I can’t seem to find a diagram of a engine showing the freeze plugs. any suggest would help, thank you in advance.

                    in reply to: help major leaking #524739
                    angelangel
                    Participant

                      I found out how to replace them. I can’t seem to find a diagram of a engine showing the freeze plugs. any suggest would help, thank you in advance.

                      in reply to: help major leaking #527657
                      angelangel
                      Participant

                        Sorry about the picture it didn’t upload. I went over to the part store & they told it wasn’t a hose but a freeze plug, & depend on it’s location, if would difficult to change out. I’m been looking for diagram on my car’s engine. Thankyou for any advice.

                        in reply to: help major leaking #524657
                        angelangel
                        Participant

                          Sorry about the picture it didn’t upload. I went over to the part store & they told it wasn’t a hose but a freeze plug, & depend on it’s location, if would difficult to change out. I’m been looking for diagram on my car’s engine. Thankyou for any advice.

                          in reply to: water pump!! #527562
                          angelangel
                          Participant

                            No,I haven’t change a water pump. But I’ve changed my tempstat & timing belt recently. thankyou for the advice. The videos aren’t showing up on the page for some reason. 🙂

                            in reply to: water pump!! #524539
                            angelangel
                            Participant

                              No,I haven’t change a water pump. But I’ve changed my tempstat & timing belt recently. thankyou for the advice. The videos aren’t showing up on the page for some reason. 🙂

                              in reply to: Daytime running light issue #525918
                              angelangel
                              Participant

                                I check the wires w/ a 12 volt tester. There’s power to light bulbs but not to the front. I believe it the dimmer switch. But I’ve not figure out how to take apart my dash. This weekend I had to work late, no taillights & memorial weekend. . So with a little working, I took a 6volt battery, wires,a light bulbs: made tail lights to put in the sockets & tag lights. No tickets, thank god. My problem with the dash is there’s bolts that need a special tool haven’t figure which one yet.

                                in reply to: Daytime running light issue #522885
                                angelangel
                                Participant

                                  I check the wires w/ a 12 volt tester. There’s power to light bulbs but not to the front. I believe it the dimmer switch. But I’ve not figure out how to take apart my dash. This weekend I had to work late, no taillights & memorial weekend. . So with a little working, I took a 6volt battery, wires,a light bulbs: made tail lights to put in the sockets & tag lights. No tickets, thank god. My problem with the dash is there’s bolts that need a special tool haven’t figure which one yet.

                                Viewing 15 replies - 46 through 60 (of 122 total)
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