Trouble starting when warm
- rjkoop
- Posts: 976
- Joined: Thu Nov 08, 2012 6:45 am
- Your car is a: 1981 Fiat Spider
- Location: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Trouble starting when warm
I had cold startup issues before (probably bad AAR) but that seems to be much better now. I now have a problem starting when warm. If I drive the car for a while, stop it for a short while (<30 mins so engine stays warm) it will start fine but the RPMs will drop in a few seconds and I need to give it a bit of gas to keep it running. Once I'm driving and if I stop the car at a stop light no problems and it will idle fine. I'm thinking the cold start injector may be staying on too long when warm and this would cause a warm engine to die. Does this make sense? It runs fine all other times. I'm thinking I could disconnect the plug for the cold air injector at warm engine startup time and see if this fixes it to confirm my issue.
Richard
1981 Fiat Spider
Ottawa, Canada
Pictures - https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/ ... sp=sharing
Videos - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL ... JNKsNVqjfa
1981 Fiat Spider
Ottawa, Canada
Pictures - https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/ ... sp=sharing
Videos - http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL ... JNKsNVqjfa
Re: Trouble starting when warm
Could be a vacume leak or might be electrical. You can start by determining what is NOT the problem. Sure about fuel? Sure about spark? I would use starting fluid all over suspect areas to eliminate vacume leaks. They're a killer.
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- Patron 2024
- Posts: 3015
- Joined: Fri Jan 27, 2006 11:45 pm
- Your car is a: 1981 Spider 2000
- Location: Wallingford,CT
Re: Trouble starting when warm
The sensor in the coolant "T" and it's connector are a common source of intermittent problems. The sensor is a variable resistor and the resistance between terminals should decrease as engine warms up. 14 deg. F = 7,000-11,000 ohms
68 deg. F = 2100-2900 ohms and 176 deg. F = 270-300 ohms. So you can see an intermittent of poor connector would make the FI computer think the engine wants a richer fuel mixture.
68 deg. F = 2100-2900 ohms and 176 deg. F = 270-300 ohms. So you can see an intermittent of poor connector would make the FI computer think the engine wants a richer fuel mixture.