glad to hear it Ken.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate
links, including eBay, Amazon, Skimlinks, and others.
Thinking I need to not overfill and likely will need to replace the Charcoal canister.
Went wheeling this weekend and noticed a strong gas smell under the hood after running. Mine has done that a lot. Matt farr commented that his has the same smell
Did some searching here and I have the following observations
I have always filled to the brim, which I am now learning is bad and overtaxes the Charcoal canister
I have high pressure when I remove the cap to fill, even sputtering at times
Gas in Kansas likely had a higher ethanol blend
Gas cap is a 18 months old as I replaced it when I failed emissions last time
I bet my charcoal canister is clogged and when I overfilled it, and hauled ass with a high ethanol content, some fuel boiled off. When I filled up near Colorado, gas was sputtering out of the tube when I took the cap off
Mud is a great resource of searchable info.
Thinking I need to not overfill and likely will need to replace the Charcoal canister.
Just a thought
Ken,
I did mine last night. Of course that's after thewent to fill it up and got sprayed due to the clogged canister and hot day.
She didn't think it was so funny. It sounds like those of us with SCs and multiple tanks are more susceptible to this as well. Just an observation.
Nick
if there is a fueling issue and no check engine light than it's an O2 sensor/wiring problem. The ECU works on the premise that the O2 feed back circuit is always working at 100%. If there is a problem where there is some error in the readings it simply tries to adjust the fuel to get what it wants.
In your case, if the engine was running at the proper AFR% but the O2 sensor showed a 10% lean condition the ECU would richen the mixture by @10%. This would not give you a code as the ECU is happy with that amount of error but would impact your fuel mileage because you are actually running rich.
In these cases I know only one way to be certain that you have the proper AFR% and that is with an off line AFR% reading by either a wide band sensor or a sniff test.
at those speeds you are definitely in open loop so if it was running rich it would not throw a CEL.
Just curious, Why does high speed mean he is in open loop? I though once the vehicle is at operating temp then its always in closed...
Did you buy a new one? I am looking to get a used one
Just curious, Why does high speed mean he is in open loop? I though once the vehicle is at operating temp then its always in closed...
Just curious, Why does high speed mean he is in open loop? I though once the vehicle is at operating temp then its always in closed...
Wait... Are you saying that me having my after-cat O2 sensor zip-tied to the frame is bad?
Not so much because it's the front one that determines fuel mixture. The rear on just confirms that the cats are working properly.
Ken - watching this with great interest. I've had the symptoms you are describing too! Did the tests with my compressor to the best of my ability, but like you can't regulate the compressor down as far as the FSM test requires. I've done what you did and cleaned the cannister at 43 psi per the FSM and reinstalled it. Given that you are altitude compared to my sea level, do you think that has anything to do with it? A new cannister is north of $250. Both I and another SoCal mudder have had the symptoms you describe when we've been at altitude - above 6000 ft.
Maybe I'm not recalling correctly, but I thought that the rear O2 sensor affected LTFT.