Saturn 95 sc2, idle dies on me..

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by JaY, Dec 3, 2006.

  1. JaY

    JaY Guest

    When i drive my sc2 the idle goes from 1000rpm down to dead stop,
    expecially when i give it more gas then usall and stoping at a light. I
    changed the idle control valve, but no luck. Any suggestions??>?
     
    JaY, Dec 3, 2006
    #1
  2. JaY

    BläBlä Guest


    When cold or only after its warmed up?

    EGR or ECT sensor or Fuel pressure. Diagnosing beats replacing.
     
    BläBlä, Dec 3, 2006
    #2
  3. JaY

    JaY Guest

    When warmed up...
     
    JaY, Dec 3, 2006
    #3
  4. JaY

    wavy Guest

    EGR or intake manifold leak would be where I'd start looking.
    Just my 1/50 of a dollar
    -WaV
     
    wavy, Dec 3, 2006
    #4
  5. JaY

    JaY Guest

    when warmed up, is there anyway to check the egr valve..... i looked up
    the ect sensor but could not find one. anything else it might be called
     
    JaY, Dec 3, 2006
    #5
  6. JaY

    JaY Guest

    when warmed up, is there anyway to check the egr valve..... i looked up
    the ect sensor but could not find one. anything else it might be called
     
    JaY, Dec 3, 2006
    #6
  7. JaY

    BläBlä Guest

    EGR vavle may not be able to close. Clean out any carbon buildup.
    Engine Coolant Temp Sensor. 95 was a change over year, you may have 2.

    http://www.autoglossary.com/
     
    BläBlä, Dec 3, 2006
    #7
  8. JaY

    JaY Guest

    Should i claen it with carb cleaner?
     
    JaY, Dec 4, 2006
    #8
  9. JaY

    wavy Guest

    Blau - I have to disagree with you on this one. The ECT sensor goes out
    "high" or "open". I dont think they short out. If they did, I'm not
    thinking it would make the engine die from slow idle.
    That said - I've never encountered THIS particular problem. Not in a
    Saturn. Checking all other sensors would be a logical plan for finding
    the problem.

    What you said about 95 being a changeover leaves me scratching my
    head... The only way to tell the engines in my 94 and 95 apart is the
    way the air intake routes into the air filter box and the difference in
    the EGR - in 95 the EGR became directly electronically controled rather
    than the vacuum diaphram actuator. They both have the same temperature
    sensors in the same places with the same wiring configuration. Did the
    95 begin using two O2 sensors? (I havent been down there long enough
    under the 95 to notice if there was a downstream post-cat-converter O2
    sensor).

    Three particular sensors I'm thinking of which may be involved are MAP
    sensor, Throttle position rheostat, and the air inlet temperature
    sensor.

    Peace -
    WaV
     
    wavy, Dec 4, 2006
    #9
  10. Not sure if Saturns have this problem, but in many cars the idle control
    valve adjusts the airflow at idle; however, the control depends on a
    minimum air flow past the throttle plate. If the throttle plate and
    bore are gummed up so that too little air passes by in the "closed"
    position (it's not supposed to be completely closed), then the idle air
    controller runs out of travel and the engine stalls.

    What brings this up is your initial complaint of the engine stalling at
    idle when stopping, such as at a light. This is a classic symptom of a
    gummed up throttle plate in many cars. I know I routinely (every 30-50K
    miles) clean the one in my '94 Saturn SW2 after learning that I needed
    to clean my Plymouth Voyager throttle at that interval. I can't recall
    if I have ever experienced the same symptoms in the Saturn that I did in
    the Voyager, however.

    It is simple and free to try cleaning and see if it helps your symptoms.
    It not, then continue with the suggestions of others. If you do clean
    it, don't just spray carb cleaner in to the throttle area, because the
    solvents may be bad for rubber parts farther in. Remove the duct from
    the air cleaner, and use a solvent moistened cloth to clean both sides
    of the throttle plate, and the bore where the plate closes. Try not to
    plug any of the little holes in the bore.

    --
    NOTE: to reply, remove all punctuation from email name field

    Ned Forrester 508-289-2226
    Applied Ocean Physics and Engineering Dept.
    Oceanographic Systems Lab http://adcp.whoi.edu/
    Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA
     
    Ned Forrester, Dec 4, 2006
    #10
  11. JaY

    BläBlä Guest

    That will be fine.

    High or open??? Wtf are you talking about Wavy? If its 10 degrees out or
    100 degrees out how does the engine richen the mixture when it's cold?
    What happens if it thinks its cold and its not? And did I say anything
    about a shorted sensor? The ECT is like a variable resistor. For a given
    resistance you get a corresponding temperature.

    16,180ohms = 14deg
    ???..snip
    3,520ohms = 68deg
    ???..snip
    177ohms = 212deg
    Where's high or open?


    The OEM ECT Sensors used plastic tips. They would crack and deform and
    start giving faulty readings. They can and should be replaced with BRASS
    tipped sensors to correct this. Are you with me so far? If the ECM
    thinks its 10 deg in the middle of summer it will flood the engine with
    fuel and stall out!

    Coolant Temperature Gauge Sending Unit (goes to dash for "analog"
    instrument panels)
    Coolant Temperature Sensor (goes to ECM)

    Prior to, and a little during OBD II switch over I think, Saturn used
    two ECT sensors. One is for the gage on the dash (if you have an analog
    gage) and the other for the ECM (which would later pass the signal onto
    the dash). Only when they were rewiring and retooling the car to fully
    use OBD II did they phase out the Gage sending unit. By 1996 all cars
    "had" to meet OBD II requirements and by 1997 I think they finally began
    using downstream o2 sensors on Saturns.

    BTW it is Bla or Blah, not Blau.
     
    BläBlä, Dec 4, 2006
    #11
  12. JaY

    Bob Shuman Guest

    No. Use Throttle Body cleaner, a toothbrush, and a soft clean rag.

    Throttle Body cleaner works much better than ordinary carb or fuel injector
    cleaner.

    Bob


    Should i claen it with carb cleaner?
     
    Bob Shuman, Dec 4, 2006
    #12
  13. JaY

    Bob Shuman Guest

    What you said about 95 being a changeover leaves me scratching my
    head... The only way to tell the engines in my 94 and 95 apart is the
    way the air intake routes into the air filter box and the difference in
    the EGR - in 95 the EGR became directly electronically controled rather
    than the vacuum diaphram actuator. They both have the same temperature
    sensors in the same places with the same wiring configuration. Did the
    95 begin using two O2 sensors? (I havent been down there long enough
    under the 95 to notice if there was a downstream post-cat-converter O2
    sensor).

    There were TWO coolant temperature sensors on Pre-1996 vehicles and only one
    in Post-1995 vehciles. One sensor went to the dashboard gauge, whiel the
    other went to the computer. Thus it was possible to have the gauge read
    accurately while the fuel misture was enriched for a cold engine, EVEN
    THOUGH IT WAS WARM.

    Hope this makes what was said more clear.

    Bob
     
    Bob Shuman, Dec 4, 2006
    #13
  14. JaY

    wavy Guest

    You're telling me something I knew already, Bob. :)
    I'm the temperature sensor KING, yo!
    (I know more about the temperature sensors on 1994 Saturns than
    anything else - which I admit really aint that much)
    Blau Blau said 95 was a changeover year.
    Not being a mechanic I guess I misunderstood what a changeover year is.
    I would have thought *96* was the changeover year if they went to a
    single temperature sensor configuration in 1996.
    I discovered all by my little self what the function of each sensor was
    .. I even went as far as to build a connector so that I could hook up to
    a digital ohm meter and measure the resistance "live" while connected
    to the vehicle.

    Blau - Open Or High = infinate resistance or very high resistance in
    the range of Megohms.
    I've not seen one fail "shorted". If you were to short out the sensor,
    would the engine think its impossibly hot? Why not? The firmware
    apparently does not invalidate unlikely input!
    That is where I got the idea that it might be "shorted".
    The sensors I've seen go bad read such high resistance - leather would
    be a better conductor. And when the ECM sees 10 or 50 megohms
    resistance at the CTS does it think it's impossibly cold or does it
    consider the reading invalid? It apparently does the former.

    On a hot day the over-rich mixture doesnt kill the engine, it makes it
    idle fast. I dont understand exactly why, but it does. Mine did.

    Lets just say I'm completely wrong and you are correct. Mine are the
    only ones produced that do this. Out of a million Saturns, my two are
    the only ones that idle fast when the sensor is bad or high (or open -
    like when you DISCONNECT it) and everyone else's is different, I guess.

    Shit, I missed the Twilight Zone...
     
    wavy, Dec 5, 2006
    #14
  15. JaY

    wavy Guest

    BläBlä, sorry about the wrong spelling. I dont know how to make an
    "a" with umglots...
    If it makes you happy I'll cut & past it.
    Oh - where is high or open? Its past the top of the page, WAY beyond
    16,181 ohms...
     
    wavy, Dec 5, 2006
    #15
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