Acura Vigor Stalling with A/C on
#1
Acura Vigor Stalling with A/C on
I'm new and have been beaten down by a machine. Situation: 1994 Vigor runs perfect with no A/C. Get car hot, Turn A/C on, car idles well until about 800 rpm where it will "on occasion" almost stall or miss for lack of a better description. RPM past that are fine. I tried: 1) Clean intake throat and butterfly 2) Clean intake air pin. 3) Replaced EGR valve 4) Replaced main relay (that 1 bolt is a killer). 5) checked Idle control valve...looked clean. 6) Injector cleaner in Gas tank. 7) Tune-up with plugs, cap was replaced last year. 8) new battery as it was 4 years old. 9) try to avoid the 800 RPM range. Help from folks are welcome.
#2
Discovery of problem solution: Due to electrical load the symtoms get worse. That means that running the A/C, fan motor, defroster, lights or any other major load impacts the "Camshaft Position Sensor".
<LI id=jsArticleStep1>The camshaft position sensor sends a signal to the ignition module or the electronic control module (whichever computer is responsible for telling the coils when to fire). This signal carries information on where the camshaft is (and, thus, where each piston is). The information is critical, because an engine can only run properly if the spark plugs fire near the top of the compression stroke, and the computer would be unable to adjust the ignition timing to compensate for driving conditions without that information. Symptoms
<LI id=jsArticleStep1>A failed camshaft position sensor will show up in a number of ways. The worst-case scenario is that there is no spark in the combustion chamber. Other symptoms can include excessively long cranking time when starting cold, rough running on an intermittent basis, poor idle, stumbling or hesitation, a drop in mileage and stalling upon acceleration. These symptoms may also be caused by a failure in the wiring of the sensor.
<LI id=jsArticleStep1>The camshaft position sensor sends a signal to the ignition module or the electronic control module (whichever computer is responsible for telling the coils when to fire). This signal carries information on where the camshaft is (and, thus, where each piston is). The information is critical, because an engine can only run properly if the spark plugs fire near the top of the compression stroke, and the computer would be unable to adjust the ignition timing to compensate for driving conditions without that information. Symptoms
<LI id=jsArticleStep1>A failed camshaft position sensor will show up in a number of ways. The worst-case scenario is that there is no spark in the combustion chamber. Other symptoms can include excessively long cranking time when starting cold, rough running on an intermittent basis, poor idle, stumbling or hesitation, a drop in mileage and stalling upon acceleration. These symptoms may also be caused by a failure in the wiring of the sensor.
#3
Hold the presses. Acura Tech and diagnostic computer was wrong. It did not fix the problem. I told them I believe problem is a poor alternator. Remember the symptoms. Runs great with no electric load. With Lights, a/c, defroster etc.. it has problems at low end RPM. A weak alternator will juice up at high RPM but not at low. Will keep you posted.
#8
Discovery of problem solution: Due to electrical load the symtoms get worse. That means that running the AC switch, fan motor, defroster, lights or any other major load impacts the "Camshaft Position Sensor".
<LI id=jsArticleStep1>The camshaft position sensor sends a signal to the ignition module or the electronic control module (whichever computer is responsible for telling the coils when to fire). This signal carries information on where the camshaft is (and, thus, where each piston is). The information is critical, because an engine can only run properly if the spark plugs fire near the top of the compression stroke, and the computer would be unable to adjust the ignition timing to compensate for driving conditions without that information. Symptoms
<LI id=jsArticleStep1>A failed camshaft position sensor will show up in a number of ways. The worst-case scenario is that there is no spark in the combustion chamber. Other symptoms can include excessively long cranking time when starting cold, rough running on an intermittent basis, poor idle, stumbling or hesitation, a drop in mileage and stalling upon acceleration. These symptoms may also be caused by a failure in the wiring of the sensor.
<LI id=jsArticleStep1>The camshaft position sensor sends a signal to the ignition module or the electronic control module (whichever computer is responsible for telling the coils when to fire). This signal carries information on where the camshaft is (and, thus, where each piston is). The information is critical, because an engine can only run properly if the spark plugs fire near the top of the compression stroke, and the computer would be unable to adjust the ignition timing to compensate for driving conditions without that information. Symptoms
<LI id=jsArticleStep1>A failed camshaft position sensor will show up in a number of ways. The worst-case scenario is that there is no spark in the combustion chamber. Other symptoms can include excessively long cranking time when starting cold, rough running on an intermittent basis, poor idle, stumbling or hesitation, a drop in mileage and stalling upon acceleration. These symptoms may also be caused by a failure in the wiring of the sensor.
Last edited by ndrewoods; 03-05-2011 at 12:18 AM.