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pascal_poirier

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  • in reply to: Brake drums #881810
    pascal_poirierpascal_poirier
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      [quote=”Bonnieman” post=189169]Why do you think you have a bad brake drum?
      Unless it is out of round, deeply scored or already has been machined to the maximum, you can simply have it resurfaced.
      Whatever you do, be sure to replace the friction material in pairs and either resurface or replace the drums.
      You can have 1 drum resurfaced and replace the bad one.[/quote]
      Agreed. Had brakes crack and scratch the drum too deep but only one side. They only replaced the bad drum and cleaned up the good one

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      in reply to: 2015 Malibu 2.5L wild fuel trim values #880845
      pascal_poirierpascal_poirier
      Participant

        [quote=”Tomh” post=188147]Mine was sticking very high, and very low. After a bit, I took notice of the fact that when I gave the engine full throttle, it would clean up and run great. At full throttle, it is in open loop, not paying attention to the O2. This strongly pointed me in the direction of something with the O2, it’s wiring, or the ECU.

        From there, I unplugged the O2, forcing the computer into open loop, and the car ran fine like that. A little low on power from running too rich, but no issues with how it drove. At that point, I was pretty positive the problem was in that system. Knowing that it was probably a 20 year old O2 sensor, and it had an aftermarket extension on the wiring, I went for those two things first. Checked the wiring, and made repairs as necessary, though it didn’t appear that there was enough damage to the wiring to cause any shorts, but I made sure of it. That didn’t fix the problem, so I swapped in a new OEM O2 sensor, figuring that the one that was there wasn’t good, even if it wasn’t the problem. Turned out that was the whole issue.

        There are ways to test the O2, and it’s wiring, but in general, I’d say if the O2 is more than a couple of years old, you probably aren’t wasting money to replace it with a new OEM unit, even if that doesn’t turn out to be your problem.

        With the readings sticking high, or low for any real period of time, I would be suspect of the sensor though.[/quote]
        Well an O2 sensor if not wideband will always trend to high or low but as you said shouldn’t stick. Mine doesn’t seem to stick though.

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        in reply to: 2015 Malibu 2.5L wild fuel trim values #880759
        pascal_poirierpascal_poirier
        Participant

          [quote=”Tomh” post=188079]I can’t see any reason why the device you are using would have any effect on the readings, other than perhaps to impart a slight delay in real time displays.

          I use a generic ELM bluetooth adapter with either my Galaxy note4 phone, or my Lenova tablet, and have not noticed any difference in readings between the two devices.

          I had some crazy fuel trims on my Accord, going as high as +30, and as low as nearly -50 combined. Had NO check engine light, though I did have performance issues. Turned out to be a bad O2 sensor, so you might want to look at what that is doing when you get those changes in fuel trim.[/quote]
          I checked the O2 sensor and it is reacting but not in a nice sign wave I see at times but sometimes sticks near to top or bottom of the scale for a while which isn’t like I have seen in some videos. But not sure if this is the cause of my issues or a symptom. Who did you tell yours was bad?

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          in reply to: 2015 Malibu 2.5L wild fuel trim values #880758
          pascal_poirierpascal_poirier
          Participant

            [quote=”cj1″ post=188066]OP- if Malibu is flex fuel check that fuel sensor is accurately reflecting type of fuel.[/quote]
            Not flex fuel and because of a quirk in gas supply we typically don’t have ethanol in our gas at all.

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            in reply to: 2015 Malibu 2.5L wild fuel trim values #880675
            pascal_poirierpascal_poirier
            Participant

              [quote=”nightflyr” post=188040]Never heard of this before. Nightflyr, would you be willing to provide details on what model dongle you’re using, and what devices/apps got accurate/inaccurate results?

              [i]Yes please more details as I tried to different apps an where consistent and tried on two other cars and the other cars where less then +/-4 on the long term.
              I am using Torque with Veepeak ELM327 Bluetooth module and using a Nexus 6P with all latest updates.[/i]

              BAFX Products 34t5 Bluetooth OBDII Scan Tool for Android Devices

              As to devices used:
              Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 7.0
              Samsung Galaxy Tab E lite 7.0
              Samsung Media player 5.0
              The most accurate is the E lite.
              The least is the Tab 3 7.0
              TORQUES App[/quote]
              Very strange as the phone/tablet should have no major impact other than maybe the amount and speed of data it can handle.

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              in reply to: 2015 Malibu 2.5L wild fuel trim values #880660
              pascal_poirierpascal_poirier
              Participant

                [quote=”relative4″ post=188034][quote=”nightflyr” post=188033]I would not base my concerns from the readings from a OBD dongle ..
                Or should I say, tablet or phone used to read it.

                I have one installed, but get different readings from 2 different tablets and a smart phone.
                According to one set of readings, the combined fuel trims were above +30, which I knew were incorrect.
                The second placed them + / – 2
                Best to use a proper scanner and proceed from there.[/quote]
                Never heard of this before. Nightflyr, would you be willing to provide details on what model dongle you’re using, and what devices/apps got accurate/inaccurate results?

                OP, what dongle, device, and app are you using?[/quote]
                Yes please more details as I tried to different apps an where consistent and tried on two other cars and the other cars where less then +/-4 on the long term.

                I am using Torque with Veepeak ELM327 Bluetooth module and using a Nexus 6P with all latest updates.

                Sent from my Nexus 6P using Tapatalk

                in reply to: 2015 Malibu 2.5L wild fuel trim values #880656
                pascal_poirierpascal_poirier
                Participant

                  [quote=”relative4″ post=188030]Agreed. This is not normal, but without a CEL or performance issues, the warranty won’t help.

                  Make sure you have an OEM air filter and it’s correctly installed.[/quote]
                  Well have been finding my fuel efficiency hasn’t been the greatest lately but it’s not too far off so thought *maybe* it was my driving but maybe it’s the fuel trim.

                  If warranty won’t cover it does anyone have suggestions on what it might be. I would like to trace it down and fix it as I find it unsettling or at least find the cause and if it’s a failing sensor force them to replace it.

                  Sent from my Nexus 6P using Tapatalk

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