Yes, and (often) won't start without throttle.tn535i wrote:Little unclear but I think you are saying it won't run under about 1000 even with some slight throttle input?
This morning it started right up though but the idle was just on the edge of stalling. "Lopey". I drove to get coffee and as soon as I pulled into the drive through it tried to stall when I went to idle.
I have a wideband. It does not appear to be overly rich or lean (13-15 range). Unlike on the b34, where i was using a single O2 sensor (the ECU was slaved off the wideband gauge) I now have 2 O2 sensors. One dedicated to the wideband and one for the ECU. FWIW.Try monitoring the O2 sensor voltage as you let the revs fall and see if it pegs one way, either high or low voltage without dithering could indicate an extreme mixture problem.
When the revs fall there is a spike of lean.
Good call. I will dig into this. The two AFMs behave slightly differently; I can't recall precisely how since it was 1am when I was doing it last night. But my spidey sense is tingling on this. I did baseline one of the two AFMs, I think the 1st one I tried. The one in there now was on the B34.This makes it sound like a mixture problem and not the idle control system. Best guesses are unmetered air either vacuum leaks or the AFM bypass screw way to far off, possible the AFM spring adjustment also but you've tried switching that already.
It's not lean, except sometimes when I come off throttle. Almost always rich and when it dies it sputters/coughs/feels-lopey.Generally I think it will sputter and cough if too rich and just falls flat like ignition switched off if too lean. A big old vacuum leak will drive it too lean and it will not run.
No; probably should invest in one. Any suggestions?Have you got a vacuum gauge you can stick on the manifold and see what you've got there also. That would give a clue since it should run maybe 14-20 range as you approach closed throttle and idle. If it's low it points to vac leak.
See video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PUfrV05aPXgYour description of the fuel relay buzzing is also very odd. It should be either on or off. On if the rpm over 20 and off below. I suppose if the relay realy is buzzing on/off/on it could lead to fuel starvation. You might just jump the pumps and see if that makes it run then figure out what up with the fuel relay. Oh and if you are jumping the relay use your DMM and measure the current to the pumps to make sure thay are pulling proper power. Something like 6 amps IIRC.
Bentley's says in-tank is 1.4 and main is 5.0, so 6 is about right. I get 4.
I swapped the o2 sensor heater relay and fuel relay. Buzzing stopped. Will toss that relay.
Of course when I go to video it, it fails to stall. But here's a video that shows the "lopey" idle.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uW0HlA5KyDE
In the video you can see unplugging ICV has no impact on idle.
Unplugging CTS caused quick idle jump, so it's functioning.
Video shows wideband with some throttle blips.
FWIW, now that I've mucked with it, I haven't gotten it to stall, but it sitll is idling 'lopey'. I wonder if that's the paul burke cam in action?