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-   -   What is the Problem - UPDATE (https://www.gtcarz.com/honda-mailing-list-327/what-problem-update-288022/)

K-town 03-11-2005 05:56 PM

What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
[Copied from original message]

For about a week or so, I had noticed a scratching sort of noise coming
from somewhere under the hood, but was unable to pin-point its location.
There were no changes in engine performance or behavior. One morning,
I was sitting at a stoplight, the engine stumbled very hard, and almost
cut off. The Check-Engine light came on, and idle RPM level returned to
normal. (I also noticed the scratching noise had stopped) Upon trying
to accelerate, I noticed the car would not rev any higher than
3,500RPMs. (This is a classic symptom of the auxillary fuel injector
not working) I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking 16 times, which
corresponds to the "Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector Circuit". I called a
few mechanics that were supposed to be "Honda specialists" and they all
told me to change the throttle body because the Throttle Position Sensor
had gone bad and that is what was causing the Check Engine light to come
on and making the Fuel Injector stop working. I bought a throttle body
from Beaver's Honda (junk yard) for $65 and changed it myself. Now,
when I crank it up, it idles at almost 2,000RPMs. The idle adjuster
screw is all the way out, so that's not causing the high idle speed.
When the accelerator is pressed, I can hear the engine suck in a lot of
air, but instead of revving up, it bogs down, and then back-fires
through the intake. Aside from changing the throttle body, I have not
changed any other parts.

[End original message]

**UPDATE**

I took my car to a highly recommended mechanic and he told me that the
problem was being caused by 2 things: #1. My distributor is not working
properly. #2. Due to #1, the ECU is throwing code #16. So, he recommended
replacing the distributor and the ECU. I've gotten a few responses to my
original post; what do you guys think? (If you're just joining us, my car
is a 1990 Civic LX, 5-speed, 1.5L Dual-Point Fuel Injection; D15B2)

Thanx again! ;-)

Jonathan

P.S. By distributor, he means the whole thing, not just the cap.



Michael Pardee 03-11-2005 06:18 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"K-town" <none_of@your.biz> wrote in message
news:8mpYd.18093$_i3.365163@twister.southeast.rr.c om...
> [Copied from original message]
>
> For about a week or so, I had noticed a scratching sort of noise coming
> from somewhere under the hood, but was unable to pin-point its location.
> There were no changes in engine performance or behavior. One morning,
> I was sitting at a stoplight, the engine stumbled very hard, and almost
> cut off. The Check-Engine light came on, and idle RPM level returned to
> normal. (I also noticed the scratching noise had stopped) Upon trying
> to accelerate, I noticed the car would not rev any higher than
> 3,500RPMs. (This is a classic symptom of the auxillary fuel injector
> not working) I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking 16 times, which
> corresponds to the "Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector Circuit". I called a
> few mechanics that were supposed to be "Honda specialists" and they all
> told me to change the throttle body because the Throttle Position Sensor
> had gone bad and that is what was causing the Check Engine light to come
> on and making the Fuel Injector stop working. I bought a throttle body
> from Beaver's Honda (junk yard) for $65 and changed it myself. Now,
> when I crank it up, it idles at almost 2,000RPMs. The idle adjuster
> screw is all the way out, so that's not causing the high idle speed.
> When the accelerator is pressed, I can hear the engine suck in a lot of
> air, but instead of revving up, it bogs down, and then back-fires
> through the intake. Aside from changing the throttle body, I have not
> changed any other parts.
>
> [End original message]
>
> **UPDATE**
>
> I took my car to a highly recommended mechanic and he told me that the
> problem was being caused by 2 things: #1. My distributor is not working
> properly. #2. Due to #1, the ECU is throwing code #16. So, he
> recommended
> replacing the distributor and the ECU. I've gotten a few responses to my
> original post; what do you guys think? (If you're just joining us, my car
> is a 1990 Civic LX, 5-speed, 1.5L Dual-Point Fuel Injection; D15B2)
>
> Thanx again! ;-)
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. By distributor, he means the whole thing, not just the cap.
>

The distributor has a spotty reputation, but I see no reason at all for
replacing the ECU unless it has definitely gotten wet. (In that case, start
with the ECU and see if the distributor is causing symptoms.) If the gurus
approve, the distributor sounds semi-reasonable (on the basis of his
reputation - I don't see the link to the injector code but it could be). I
recommend you have him hold off on the ECU. If you get to the point you
believe you need an ECU, definitely go for one from a wrecking yard for a
tenth the price of a new one. But I'd bet heavily you don't need an ECU if
the car hasn't been in deep water when this started.

Mike



Michael Pardee 03-11-2005 06:18 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"K-town" <none_of@your.biz> wrote in message
news:8mpYd.18093$_i3.365163@twister.southeast.rr.c om...
> [Copied from original message]
>
> For about a week or so, I had noticed a scratching sort of noise coming
> from somewhere under the hood, but was unable to pin-point its location.
> There were no changes in engine performance or behavior. One morning,
> I was sitting at a stoplight, the engine stumbled very hard, and almost
> cut off. The Check-Engine light came on, and idle RPM level returned to
> normal. (I also noticed the scratching noise had stopped) Upon trying
> to accelerate, I noticed the car would not rev any higher than
> 3,500RPMs. (This is a classic symptom of the auxillary fuel injector
> not working) I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking 16 times, which
> corresponds to the "Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector Circuit". I called a
> few mechanics that were supposed to be "Honda specialists" and they all
> told me to change the throttle body because the Throttle Position Sensor
> had gone bad and that is what was causing the Check Engine light to come
> on and making the Fuel Injector stop working. I bought a throttle body
> from Beaver's Honda (junk yard) for $65 and changed it myself. Now,
> when I crank it up, it idles at almost 2,000RPMs. The idle adjuster
> screw is all the way out, so that's not causing the high idle speed.
> When the accelerator is pressed, I can hear the engine suck in a lot of
> air, but instead of revving up, it bogs down, and then back-fires
> through the intake. Aside from changing the throttle body, I have not
> changed any other parts.
>
> [End original message]
>
> **UPDATE**
>
> I took my car to a highly recommended mechanic and he told me that the
> problem was being caused by 2 things: #1. My distributor is not working
> properly. #2. Due to #1, the ECU is throwing code #16. So, he
> recommended
> replacing the distributor and the ECU. I've gotten a few responses to my
> original post; what do you guys think? (If you're just joining us, my car
> is a 1990 Civic LX, 5-speed, 1.5L Dual-Point Fuel Injection; D15B2)
>
> Thanx again! ;-)
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. By distributor, he means the whole thing, not just the cap.
>

The distributor has a spotty reputation, but I see no reason at all for
replacing the ECU unless it has definitely gotten wet. (In that case, start
with the ECU and see if the distributor is causing symptoms.) If the gurus
approve, the distributor sounds semi-reasonable (on the basis of his
reputation - I don't see the link to the injector code but it could be). I
recommend you have him hold off on the ECU. If you get to the point you
believe you need an ECU, definitely go for one from a wrecking yard for a
tenth the price of a new one. But I'd bet heavily you don't need an ECU if
the car hasn't been in deep water when this started.

Mike



jim beam 03-11-2005 10:54 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
K-town wrote:
> [Copied from original message]
>
> For about a week or so, I had noticed a scratching sort of noise coming
> from somewhere under the hood, but was unable to pin-point its location.
> There were no changes in engine performance or behavior. One morning,
> I was sitting at a stoplight, the engine stumbled very hard, and almost
> cut off. The Check-Engine light came on, and idle RPM level returned to
> normal. (I also noticed the scratching noise had stopped) Upon trying
> to accelerate, I noticed the car would not rev any higher than
> 3,500RPMs. (This is a classic symptom of the auxillary fuel injector
> not working) I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking 16 times, which
> corresponds to the "Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector Circuit". I called a
> few mechanics that were supposed to be "Honda specialists" and they all
> told me to change the throttle body because the Throttle Position Sensor
> had gone bad and that is what was causing the Check Engine light to come
> on and making the Fuel Injector stop working. I bought a throttle body
> from Beaver's Honda (junk yard) for $65 and changed it myself. Now,
> when I crank it up, it idles at almost 2,000RPMs. The idle adjuster
> screw is all the way out, so that's not causing the high idle speed.
> When the accelerator is pressed, I can hear the engine suck in a lot of
> air, but instead of revving up, it bogs down, and then back-fires
> through the intake. Aside from changing the throttle body, I have not
> changed any other parts.
>
> [End original message]
>
> **UPDATE**
>
> I took my car to a highly recommended mechanic and he told me that the
> problem was being caused by 2 things: #1. My distributor is not working
> properly. #2. Due to #1, the ECU is throwing code #16. So, he recommended
> replacing the distributor and the ECU. I've gotten a few responses to my
> original post; what do you guys think? (If you're just joining us, my car
> is a 1990 Civic LX, 5-speed, 1.5L Dual-Point Fuel Injection; D15B2)
>
> Thanx again! ;-)
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. By distributor, he means the whole thing, not just the cap.
>
>

DO NOT, DO NOT, DO NOT replace the distributor & ecu for a code 16. i
can't tell you how many times i've seen owners get hosed for massive
amounts of money like this, & guess what? it /won't/ fix your problem!

as before, fix the 16 - either $55 for a new relay or $0 if you're handy
with a soldering iron, then address the other points we discussed
before. if the distributor has an electronic fault, the car won't run
at all. if it has a mechanical fault like the rotor arm's broken loose,
it's a simple fix unless it's ruined the distributor's bearings, but
that's easliy determined by taking the distributor cap off & trying to
jiggle the central shaft around. side to side play = bearing problem.

report back after you've dealt with the relay, checked the distributor &
checked the hose/injector squirt issues we discussed earlier.


jim beam 03-11-2005 10:54 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
K-town wrote:
> [Copied from original message]
>
> For about a week or so, I had noticed a scratching sort of noise coming
> from somewhere under the hood, but was unable to pin-point its location.
> There were no changes in engine performance or behavior. One morning,
> I was sitting at a stoplight, the engine stumbled very hard, and almost
> cut off. The Check-Engine light came on, and idle RPM level returned to
> normal. (I also noticed the scratching noise had stopped) Upon trying
> to accelerate, I noticed the car would not rev any higher than
> 3,500RPMs. (This is a classic symptom of the auxillary fuel injector
> not working) I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking 16 times, which
> corresponds to the "Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector Circuit". I called a
> few mechanics that were supposed to be "Honda specialists" and they all
> told me to change the throttle body because the Throttle Position Sensor
> had gone bad and that is what was causing the Check Engine light to come
> on and making the Fuel Injector stop working. I bought a throttle body
> from Beaver's Honda (junk yard) for $65 and changed it myself. Now,
> when I crank it up, it idles at almost 2,000RPMs. The idle adjuster
> screw is all the way out, so that's not causing the high idle speed.
> When the accelerator is pressed, I can hear the engine suck in a lot of
> air, but instead of revving up, it bogs down, and then back-fires
> through the intake. Aside from changing the throttle body, I have not
> changed any other parts.
>
> [End original message]
>
> **UPDATE**
>
> I took my car to a highly recommended mechanic and he told me that the
> problem was being caused by 2 things: #1. My distributor is not working
> properly. #2. Due to #1, the ECU is throwing code #16. So, he recommended
> replacing the distributor and the ECU. I've gotten a few responses to my
> original post; what do you guys think? (If you're just joining us, my car
> is a 1990 Civic LX, 5-speed, 1.5L Dual-Point Fuel Injection; D15B2)
>
> Thanx again! ;-)
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. By distributor, he means the whole thing, not just the cap.
>
>

DO NOT, DO NOT, DO NOT replace the distributor & ecu for a code 16. i
can't tell you how many times i've seen owners get hosed for massive
amounts of money like this, & guess what? it /won't/ fix your problem!

as before, fix the 16 - either $55 for a new relay or $0 if you're handy
with a soldering iron, then address the other points we discussed
before. if the distributor has an electronic fault, the car won't run
at all. if it has a mechanical fault like the rotor arm's broken loose,
it's a simple fix unless it's ruined the distributor's bearings, but
that's easliy determined by taking the distributor cap off & trying to
jiggle the central shaft around. side to side play = bearing problem.

report back after you've dealt with the relay, checked the distributor &
checked the hose/injector squirt issues we discussed earlier.


K-town 03-12-2005 10:31 AM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
----- Original Message -----
From: "jim beam" <nospam@example.net>
Newsgroups: alt.autos.honda
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2005 10:54 PM
Subject: Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE


> K-town wrote:
>> [Copied from original message]
>>
>> For about a week or so, I had noticed a scratching sort of noise coming
>> from somewhere under the hood, but was unable to pin-point its location.
>> There were no changes in engine performance or behavior. One morning,
>> I was sitting at a stoplight, the engine stumbled very hard, and almost
>> cut off. The Check-Engine light came on, and idle RPM level returned to
>> normal. (I also noticed the scratching noise had stopped) Upon trying
>> to accelerate, I noticed the car would not rev any higher than
>> 3,500RPMs. (This is a classic symptom of the auxillary fuel injector
>> not working) I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking 16 times, which
>> corresponds to the "Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector Circuit". I called a
>> few mechanics that were supposed to be "Honda specialists" and they all
>> told me to change the throttle body because the Throttle Position Sensor
>> had gone bad and that is what was causing the Check Engine light to come
>> on and making the Fuel Injector stop working. I bought a throttle body
>> from Beaver's Honda (junk yard) for $65 and changed it myself. Now,
>> when I crank it up, it idles at almost 2,000RPMs. The idle adjuster
>> screw is all the way out, so that's not causing the high idle speed.
>> When the accelerator is pressed, I can hear the engine suck in a lot of
>> air, but instead of revving up, it bogs down, and then back-fires
>> through the intake. Aside from changing the throttle body, I have not
>> changed any other parts.
>>
>> [End original message]
>>
>> **UPDATE**
>>
>> I took my car to a highly recommended mechanic and he told me that the
>> problem was being caused by 2 things: #1. My distributor is not working
>> properly. #2. Due to #1, the ECU is throwing code #16. So, he
>> recommended
>> replacing the distributor and the ECU. I've gotten a few responses to my
>> original post; what do you guys think? (If you're just joining us, my
>> car
>> is a 1990 Civic LX, 5-speed, 1.5L Dual-Point Fuel Injection; D15B2)
>>
>> Thanx again! ;-)
>>
>> Jonathan
>>
>> P.S. By distributor, he means the whole thing, not just the cap.

> DO NOT, DO NOT, DO NOT replace the distributor & ecu for a code 16. i
> can't tell you how many times i've seen owners get hosed for massive
> amounts of money like this, & guess what? it /won't/ fix your problem!
>
> as before, fix the 16 - either $55 for a new relay or $0 if you're handy
> with a soldering iron, then address the other points we discussed before.
> if the distributor has an electronic fault, the car won't run at all. if
> it has a mechanical fault like the rotor arm's broken loose, it's a simple
> fix unless it's ruined the distributor's bearings, but that's easliy
> determined by taking the distributor cap off & trying to jiggle the
> central shaft around. side to side play = bearing problem.
>
> report back after you've dealt with the relay, checked the distributor &
> checked the hose/injector squirt issues we discussed earlier.


I picked up my car last night from the mechanic. (I told him I can replace
the distributor and ECU myself, so don't fix it) Upon starting the car, the
Check-Engine light immediately came on, and all the way home, my car would
not go above 40 MPH, even downhill! My average speed was about 25MPH. The
car had practically no power whatsoever; like it was running on only 2 out
of 4 cylinders. If I pressed the gas pedal down about 1/4, it would
backfire through the intake severely about 3 or 4 times in about 2 seconds.
If I floored it, it would smoke out the tailpipe terribly, and the
temperature gauge would rise to 3/4. I found pressing it down about ˝ way
was the "happy medium"; the temperature gauge stayed at the normal level, it
didn't backfire, but it was still running VERY rich. (I could smell gas
from inside the car...granted I had the vent open) It will idle at a
relatively normal level now, but has almost no torque or horsepower. Any
more ideas guys?

Thanx again! :-)

Jonathan

P.S. I'm going to check the distributor and main relay this weekend. The
mechanic didn't say anything about finding any vacuum leaks.



K-town 03-12-2005 10:31 AM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
----- Original Message -----
From: "jim beam" <nospam@example.net>
Newsgroups: alt.autos.honda
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2005 10:54 PM
Subject: Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE


> K-town wrote:
>> [Copied from original message]
>>
>> For about a week or so, I had noticed a scratching sort of noise coming
>> from somewhere under the hood, but was unable to pin-point its location.
>> There were no changes in engine performance or behavior. One morning,
>> I was sitting at a stoplight, the engine stumbled very hard, and almost
>> cut off. The Check-Engine light came on, and idle RPM level returned to
>> normal. (I also noticed the scratching noise had stopped) Upon trying
>> to accelerate, I noticed the car would not rev any higher than
>> 3,500RPMs. (This is a classic symptom of the auxillary fuel injector
>> not working) I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking 16 times, which
>> corresponds to the "Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector Circuit". I called a
>> few mechanics that were supposed to be "Honda specialists" and they all
>> told me to change the throttle body because the Throttle Position Sensor
>> had gone bad and that is what was causing the Check Engine light to come
>> on and making the Fuel Injector stop working. I bought a throttle body
>> from Beaver's Honda (junk yard) for $65 and changed it myself. Now,
>> when I crank it up, it idles at almost 2,000RPMs. The idle adjuster
>> screw is all the way out, so that's not causing the high idle speed.
>> When the accelerator is pressed, I can hear the engine suck in a lot of
>> air, but instead of revving up, it bogs down, and then back-fires
>> through the intake. Aside from changing the throttle body, I have not
>> changed any other parts.
>>
>> [End original message]
>>
>> **UPDATE**
>>
>> I took my car to a highly recommended mechanic and he told me that the
>> problem was being caused by 2 things: #1. My distributor is not working
>> properly. #2. Due to #1, the ECU is throwing code #16. So, he
>> recommended
>> replacing the distributor and the ECU. I've gotten a few responses to my
>> original post; what do you guys think? (If you're just joining us, my
>> car
>> is a 1990 Civic LX, 5-speed, 1.5L Dual-Point Fuel Injection; D15B2)
>>
>> Thanx again! ;-)
>>
>> Jonathan
>>
>> P.S. By distributor, he means the whole thing, not just the cap.

> DO NOT, DO NOT, DO NOT replace the distributor & ecu for a code 16. i
> can't tell you how many times i've seen owners get hosed for massive
> amounts of money like this, & guess what? it /won't/ fix your problem!
>
> as before, fix the 16 - either $55 for a new relay or $0 if you're handy
> with a soldering iron, then address the other points we discussed before.
> if the distributor has an electronic fault, the car won't run at all. if
> it has a mechanical fault like the rotor arm's broken loose, it's a simple
> fix unless it's ruined the distributor's bearings, but that's easliy
> determined by taking the distributor cap off & trying to jiggle the
> central shaft around. side to side play = bearing problem.
>
> report back after you've dealt with the relay, checked the distributor &
> checked the hose/injector squirt issues we discussed earlier.


I picked up my car last night from the mechanic. (I told him I can replace
the distributor and ECU myself, so don't fix it) Upon starting the car, the
Check-Engine light immediately came on, and all the way home, my car would
not go above 40 MPH, even downhill! My average speed was about 25MPH. The
car had practically no power whatsoever; like it was running on only 2 out
of 4 cylinders. If I pressed the gas pedal down about 1/4, it would
backfire through the intake severely about 3 or 4 times in about 2 seconds.
If I floored it, it would smoke out the tailpipe terribly, and the
temperature gauge would rise to 3/4. I found pressing it down about ˝ way
was the "happy medium"; the temperature gauge stayed at the normal level, it
didn't backfire, but it was still running VERY rich. (I could smell gas
from inside the car...granted I had the vent open) It will idle at a
relatively normal level now, but has almost no torque or horsepower. Any
more ideas guys?

Thanx again! :-)

Jonathan

P.S. I'm going to check the distributor and main relay this weekend. The
mechanic didn't say anything about finding any vacuum leaks.



jim beam 03-12-2005 10:41 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
K-town wrote:
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "jim beam" <nospam@example.net>
> Newsgroups: alt.autos.honda
> Sent: Friday, March 11, 2005 10:54 PM
> Subject: Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
>
>
>
>>K-town wrote:
>>
>>>[Copied from original message]
>>>
>>>For about a week or so, I had noticed a scratching sort of noise coming
>>>from somewhere under the hood, but was unable to pin-point its location.
>>> There were no changes in engine performance or behavior. One morning,
>>>I was sitting at a stoplight, the engine stumbled very hard, and almost
>>>cut off. The Check-Engine light came on, and idle RPM level returned to
>>>normal. (I also noticed the scratching noise had stopped) Upon trying
>>>to accelerate, I noticed the car would not rev any higher than
>>>3,500RPMs. (This is a classic symptom of the auxillary fuel injector
>>>not working) I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking 16 times, which
>>>corresponds to the "Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector Circuit". I called a
>>>few mechanics that were supposed to be "Honda specialists" and they all
>>>told me to change the throttle body because the Throttle Position Sensor
>>>had gone bad and that is what was causing the Check Engine light to come
>>>on and making the Fuel Injector stop working. I bought a throttle body
>>>from Beaver's Honda (junk yard) for $65 and changed it myself. Now,
>>>when I crank it up, it idles at almost 2,000RPMs. The idle adjuster
>>>screw is all the way out, so that's not causing the high idle speed.
>>>When the accelerator is pressed, I can hear the engine suck in a lot of
>>>air, but instead of revving up, it bogs down, and then back-fires
>>>through the intake. Aside from changing the throttle body, I have not
>>>changed any other parts.
>>>
>>>[End original message]
>>>
>>>**UPDATE**
>>>
>>>I took my car to a highly recommended mechanic and he told me that the
>>>problem was being caused by 2 things: #1. My distributor is not working
>>>properly. #2. Due to #1, the ECU is throwing code #16. So, he
>>>recommended
>>>replacing the distributor and the ECU. I've gotten a few responses to my
>>>original post; what do you guys think? (If you're just joining us, my
>>>car
>>>is a 1990 Civic LX, 5-speed, 1.5L Dual-Point Fuel Injection; D15B2)
>>>
>>>Thanx again! ;-)
>>>
>>>Jonathan
>>>
>>>P.S. By distributor, he means the whole thing, not just the cap.

>>
>>DO NOT, DO NOT, DO NOT replace the distributor & ecu for a code 16. i
>>can't tell you how many times i've seen owners get hosed for massive
>>amounts of money like this, & guess what? it /won't/ fix your problem!
>>
>>as before, fix the 16 - either $55 for a new relay or $0 if you're handy
>>with a soldering iron, then address the other points we discussed before.
>>if the distributor has an electronic fault, the car won't run at all. if
>>it has a mechanical fault like the rotor arm's broken loose, it's a simple
>>fix unless it's ruined the distributor's bearings, but that's easliy
>>determined by taking the distributor cap off & trying to jiggle the
>>central shaft around. side to side play = bearing problem.
>>
>>report back after you've dealt with the relay, checked the distributor &
>>checked the hose/injector squirt issues we discussed earlier.

>
>
> I picked up my car last night from the mechanic. (I told him I can replace
> the distributor and ECU myself, so don't fix it) Upon starting the car, the
> Check-Engine light immediately came on, and all the way home, my car would
> not go above 40 MPH, even downhill! My average speed was about 25MPH. The
> car had practically no power whatsoever; like it was running on only 2 out
> of 4 cylinders. If I pressed the gas pedal down about 1/4, it would
> backfire through the intake severely about 3 or 4 times in about 2 seconds.
> If I floored it, it would smoke out the tailpipe terribly, and the
> temperature gauge would rise to 3/4. I found pressing it down about ˝ way
> was the "happy medium"; the temperature gauge stayed at the normal level, it
> didn't backfire, but it was still running VERY rich. (I could smell gas
> from inside the car...granted I had the vent open) It will idle at a
> relatively normal level now, but has almost no torque or horsepower. Any
> more ideas guys?
>
> Thanx again! :-)
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. I'm going to check the distributor and main relay this weekend. The
> mechanic didn't say anything about finding any vacuum leaks.


this is the same "highly recommended" mechanic that wanted to replace
the ecu?

jonathan, you've got to be methodical & systematic in both your
diagnosis & repair. the symptoms you describe could be a number of
things including skipped timing belt, messed up firing order, broken
rotor arm, injector jammed open...

1. read the ecu codes & fix each issue as indicated. remember, 16 is
usually main relay, not injectors. apart from that, the codes are
reliable afaik.

2. check inside the distributor. the rotor arm breaking loose could
account for a scraping noise, then misfire.

3. PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE take the trouble to check for the things already
suggested before continuing to post asking for more diagnosis. it's
pretty shabby having to guess which car you have, then have to guess a
diagnosis for an incompletely described problem. do your homework, then
report results so we can get to the bottom of this.


jim beam 03-12-2005 10:41 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
K-town wrote:
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "jim beam" <nospam@example.net>
> Newsgroups: alt.autos.honda
> Sent: Friday, March 11, 2005 10:54 PM
> Subject: Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
>
>
>
>>K-town wrote:
>>
>>>[Copied from original message]
>>>
>>>For about a week or so, I had noticed a scratching sort of noise coming
>>>from somewhere under the hood, but was unable to pin-point its location.
>>> There were no changes in engine performance or behavior. One morning,
>>>I was sitting at a stoplight, the engine stumbled very hard, and almost
>>>cut off. The Check-Engine light came on, and idle RPM level returned to
>>>normal. (I also noticed the scratching noise had stopped) Upon trying
>>>to accelerate, I noticed the car would not rev any higher than
>>>3,500RPMs. (This is a classic symptom of the auxillary fuel injector
>>>not working) I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking 16 times, which
>>>corresponds to the "Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector Circuit". I called a
>>>few mechanics that were supposed to be "Honda specialists" and they all
>>>told me to change the throttle body because the Throttle Position Sensor
>>>had gone bad and that is what was causing the Check Engine light to come
>>>on and making the Fuel Injector stop working. I bought a throttle body
>>>from Beaver's Honda (junk yard) for $65 and changed it myself. Now,
>>>when I crank it up, it idles at almost 2,000RPMs. The idle adjuster
>>>screw is all the way out, so that's not causing the high idle speed.
>>>When the accelerator is pressed, I can hear the engine suck in a lot of
>>>air, but instead of revving up, it bogs down, and then back-fires
>>>through the intake. Aside from changing the throttle body, I have not
>>>changed any other parts.
>>>
>>>[End original message]
>>>
>>>**UPDATE**
>>>
>>>I took my car to a highly recommended mechanic and he told me that the
>>>problem was being caused by 2 things: #1. My distributor is not working
>>>properly. #2. Due to #1, the ECU is throwing code #16. So, he
>>>recommended
>>>replacing the distributor and the ECU. I've gotten a few responses to my
>>>original post; what do you guys think? (If you're just joining us, my
>>>car
>>>is a 1990 Civic LX, 5-speed, 1.5L Dual-Point Fuel Injection; D15B2)
>>>
>>>Thanx again! ;-)
>>>
>>>Jonathan
>>>
>>>P.S. By distributor, he means the whole thing, not just the cap.

>>
>>DO NOT, DO NOT, DO NOT replace the distributor & ecu for a code 16. i
>>can't tell you how many times i've seen owners get hosed for massive
>>amounts of money like this, & guess what? it /won't/ fix your problem!
>>
>>as before, fix the 16 - either $55 for a new relay or $0 if you're handy
>>with a soldering iron, then address the other points we discussed before.
>>if the distributor has an electronic fault, the car won't run at all. if
>>it has a mechanical fault like the rotor arm's broken loose, it's a simple
>>fix unless it's ruined the distributor's bearings, but that's easliy
>>determined by taking the distributor cap off & trying to jiggle the
>>central shaft around. side to side play = bearing problem.
>>
>>report back after you've dealt with the relay, checked the distributor &
>>checked the hose/injector squirt issues we discussed earlier.

>
>
> I picked up my car last night from the mechanic. (I told him I can replace
> the distributor and ECU myself, so don't fix it) Upon starting the car, the
> Check-Engine light immediately came on, and all the way home, my car would
> not go above 40 MPH, even downhill! My average speed was about 25MPH. The
> car had practically no power whatsoever; like it was running on only 2 out
> of 4 cylinders. If I pressed the gas pedal down about 1/4, it would
> backfire through the intake severely about 3 or 4 times in about 2 seconds.
> If I floored it, it would smoke out the tailpipe terribly, and the
> temperature gauge would rise to 3/4. I found pressing it down about ˝ way
> was the "happy medium"; the temperature gauge stayed at the normal level, it
> didn't backfire, but it was still running VERY rich. (I could smell gas
> from inside the car...granted I had the vent open) It will idle at a
> relatively normal level now, but has almost no torque or horsepower. Any
> more ideas guys?
>
> Thanx again! :-)
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. I'm going to check the distributor and main relay this weekend. The
> mechanic didn't say anything about finding any vacuum leaks.


this is the same "highly recommended" mechanic that wanted to replace
the ecu?

jonathan, you've got to be methodical & systematic in both your
diagnosis & repair. the symptoms you describe could be a number of
things including skipped timing belt, messed up firing order, broken
rotor arm, injector jammed open...

1. read the ecu codes & fix each issue as indicated. remember, 16 is
usually main relay, not injectors. apart from that, the codes are
reliable afaik.

2. check inside the distributor. the rotor arm breaking loose could
account for a scraping noise, then misfire.

3. PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE take the trouble to check for the things already
suggested before continuing to post asking for more diagnosis. it's
pretty shabby having to guess which car you have, then have to guess a
diagnosis for an incompletely described problem. do your homework, then
report results so we can get to the bottom of this.


Jonathan Upright 03-13-2005 04:39 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
jim beam wrote:
> K-town wrote:
>
>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "jim beam" <nospam@example.net>
>> Newsgroups: alt.autos.honda
>> Sent: Friday, March 11, 2005 10:54 PM
>> Subject: Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
>>
>>
>>
>>> K-town wrote:
>>>
>>>> [Copied from original message]
>>>>
>>>> For about a week or so, I had noticed a scratching sort of noise coming
>>>> from somewhere under the hood, but was unable to pin-point its
>>>> location.
>>>> There were no changes in engine performance or behavior. One morning,
>>>> I was sitting at a stoplight, the engine stumbled very hard, and almost
>>>> cut off. The Check-Engine light came on, and idle RPM level
>>>> returned to
>>>> normal. (I also noticed the scratching noise had stopped) Upon trying
>>>> to accelerate, I noticed the car would not rev any higher than
>>>> 3,500RPMs. (This is a classic symptom of the auxillary fuel injector
>>>> not working) I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking 16 times,
>>>> which
>>>> corresponds to the "Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector Circuit". I
>>>> called a
>>>> few mechanics that were supposed to be "Honda specialists" and they all
>>>> told me to change the throttle body because the Throttle Position
>>>> Sensor
>>>> had gone bad and that is what was causing the Check Engine light to
>>>> come
>>>> on and making the Fuel Injector stop working. I bought a throttle body
>>>> from Beaver's Honda (junk yard) for $65 and changed it myself. Now,
>>>> when I crank it up, it idles at almost 2,000RPMs. The idle adjuster
>>>> screw is all the way out, so that's not causing the high idle speed.
>>>> When the accelerator is pressed, I can hear the engine suck in a lot of
>>>> air, but instead of revving up, it bogs down, and then back-fires
>>>> through the intake. Aside from changing the throttle body, I have not
>>>> changed any other parts.
>>>>
>>>> [End original message]
>>>>
>>>> **UPDATE**
>>>>
>>>> I took my car to a highly recommended mechanic and he told me that the
>>>> problem was being caused by 2 things: #1. My distributor is not
>>>> working
>>>> properly. #2. Due to #1, the ECU is throwing code #16. So, he
>>>> recommended
>>>> replacing the distributor and the ECU. I've gotten a few responses
>>>> to my
>>>> original post; what do you guys think? (If you're just joining us,
>>>> my car
>>>> is a 1990 Civic LX, 5-speed, 1.5L Dual-Point Fuel Injection; D15B2)
>>>>
>>>> Thanx again! ;-)
>>>>
>>>> Jonathan
>>>>
>>>> P.S. By distributor, he means the whole thing, not just the cap.
>>>
>>>
>>> DO NOT, DO NOT, DO NOT replace the distributor & ecu for a code 16.
>>> i can't tell you how many times i've seen owners get hosed for
>>> massive amounts of money like this, & guess what? it /won't/ fix
>>> your problem!
>>>
>>> as before, fix the 16 - either $55 for a new relay or $0 if you're
>>> handy with a soldering iron, then address the other points we
>>> discussed before. if the distributor has an electronic fault, the car
>>> won't run at all. if it has a mechanical fault like the rotor arm's
>>> broken loose, it's a simple fix unless it's ruined the distributor's
>>> bearings, but that's easliy determined by taking the distributor cap
>>> off & trying to jiggle the central shaft around. side to side play =
>>> bearing problem.
>>>
>>> report back after you've dealt with the relay, checked the
>>> distributor & checked the hose/injector squirt issues we discussed
>>> earlier.

>>
>>
>>
>> I picked up my car last night from the mechanic. (I told him I can
>> replace
>> the distributor and ECU myself, so don't fix it) Upon starting the
>> car, the
>> Check-Engine light immediately came on, and all the way home, my car
>> would
>> not go above 40 MPH, even downhill! My average speed was about
>> 25MPH. The
>> car had practically no power whatsoever; like it was running on only 2
>> out
>> of 4 cylinders. If I pressed the gas pedal down about 1/4, it would
>> backfire through the intake severely about 3 or 4 times in about 2
>> seconds.
>> If I floored it, it would smoke out the tailpipe terribly, and the
>> temperature gauge would rise to 3/4. I found pressing it down about ˝
>> way
>> was the "happy medium"; the temperature gauge stayed at the normal
>> level, it
>> didn't backfire, but it was still running VERY rich. (I could smell gas
>> from inside the car...granted I had the vent open) It will idle at a
>> relatively normal level now, but has almost no torque or horsepower. Any
>> more ideas guys?
>>
>> Thanx again! :-)
>>
>> Jonathan
>>
>> P.S. I'm going to check the distributor and main relay this weekend.
>> The
>> mechanic didn't say anything about finding any vacuum leaks.

>
>
> this is the same "highly recommended" mechanic that wanted to replace
> the ecu?
>
> jonathan, you've got to be methodical & systematic in both your
> diagnosis & repair. the symptoms you describe could be a number of
> things including skipped timing belt, messed up firing order, broken
> rotor arm, injector jammed open...
>
> 1. read the ecu codes & fix each issue as indicated. remember, 16 is
> usually main relay, not injectors. apart from that, the codes are
> reliable afaik.
>
> 2. check inside the distributor. the rotor arm breaking loose could
> account for a scraping noise, then misfire.
>
> 3. PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE take the trouble to check for the things already
> suggested before continuing to post asking for more diagnosis. it's
> pretty shabby having to guess which car you have, then have to guess a
> diagnosis for an incompletely described problem. do your homework, then
> report results so we can get to the bottom of this.
>


Well, we can eliminate the skipped timing belt and messed up firing
order. The mechanic told me he checked the timing belt and it is fine.
I also don't think the injectors are (or ever were) the problem.
(Neither does the mechanic that looked at my car) Plus, if you look at
my original message, I said, "I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking
16 times, which corresponds to the 'Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector
Circuit'. I called a few mechanics that were supposed to be 'Honda
specialists' and they all told me to change the throttle body because
the Throttle Position Sensor had gone bad and that is what was causing
the Check Engine light to come on and making the Fuel Injector stop
working." So I was simply trying to see if you agreed or disagreed with
that hypothesis. All you had to say was, "I disagree with them; I think
it's...etc." Also, after I took my car to the mechanic who said the
problem is in the distributor, and he acutally had his hands on my car,
that was more-or-less an indirect dismissal of the ideas those "other
mechanics" had.

Anyway, back to the subject: I removed the distributor today and found
that there IS some play in the rotor arm. Also, I took the cap off the
distributor to find that the contacts inside had grooves in them.
(Accompanied by a little pile of metal shavings at the bottom of the
cap) The grooves are cut about 1/4 of the way down from the top of the
contacts, almost shearing the tops off. My rotor button contact is worn
down really bad too. So with this fact in mind, would you think it's
safe to say the problem is the distributor?

Thanx,

Jonathan

P.S. I will definitely need a new cap and rotor button now, in addition
to another distributor... :-(

Jonathan Upright 03-13-2005 04:39 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
jim beam wrote:
> K-town wrote:
>
>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "jim beam" <nospam@example.net>
>> Newsgroups: alt.autos.honda
>> Sent: Friday, March 11, 2005 10:54 PM
>> Subject: Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
>>
>>
>>
>>> K-town wrote:
>>>
>>>> [Copied from original message]
>>>>
>>>> For about a week or so, I had noticed a scratching sort of noise coming
>>>> from somewhere under the hood, but was unable to pin-point its
>>>> location.
>>>> There were no changes in engine performance or behavior. One morning,
>>>> I was sitting at a stoplight, the engine stumbled very hard, and almost
>>>> cut off. The Check-Engine light came on, and idle RPM level
>>>> returned to
>>>> normal. (I also noticed the scratching noise had stopped) Upon trying
>>>> to accelerate, I noticed the car would not rev any higher than
>>>> 3,500RPMs. (This is a classic symptom of the auxillary fuel injector
>>>> not working) I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking 16 times,
>>>> which
>>>> corresponds to the "Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector Circuit". I
>>>> called a
>>>> few mechanics that were supposed to be "Honda specialists" and they all
>>>> told me to change the throttle body because the Throttle Position
>>>> Sensor
>>>> had gone bad and that is what was causing the Check Engine light to
>>>> come
>>>> on and making the Fuel Injector stop working. I bought a throttle body
>>>> from Beaver's Honda (junk yard) for $65 and changed it myself. Now,
>>>> when I crank it up, it idles at almost 2,000RPMs. The idle adjuster
>>>> screw is all the way out, so that's not causing the high idle speed.
>>>> When the accelerator is pressed, I can hear the engine suck in a lot of
>>>> air, but instead of revving up, it bogs down, and then back-fires
>>>> through the intake. Aside from changing the throttle body, I have not
>>>> changed any other parts.
>>>>
>>>> [End original message]
>>>>
>>>> **UPDATE**
>>>>
>>>> I took my car to a highly recommended mechanic and he told me that the
>>>> problem was being caused by 2 things: #1. My distributor is not
>>>> working
>>>> properly. #2. Due to #1, the ECU is throwing code #16. So, he
>>>> recommended
>>>> replacing the distributor and the ECU. I've gotten a few responses
>>>> to my
>>>> original post; what do you guys think? (If you're just joining us,
>>>> my car
>>>> is a 1990 Civic LX, 5-speed, 1.5L Dual-Point Fuel Injection; D15B2)
>>>>
>>>> Thanx again! ;-)
>>>>
>>>> Jonathan
>>>>
>>>> P.S. By distributor, he means the whole thing, not just the cap.
>>>
>>>
>>> DO NOT, DO NOT, DO NOT replace the distributor & ecu for a code 16.
>>> i can't tell you how many times i've seen owners get hosed for
>>> massive amounts of money like this, & guess what? it /won't/ fix
>>> your problem!
>>>
>>> as before, fix the 16 - either $55 for a new relay or $0 if you're
>>> handy with a soldering iron, then address the other points we
>>> discussed before. if the distributor has an electronic fault, the car
>>> won't run at all. if it has a mechanical fault like the rotor arm's
>>> broken loose, it's a simple fix unless it's ruined the distributor's
>>> bearings, but that's easliy determined by taking the distributor cap
>>> off & trying to jiggle the central shaft around. side to side play =
>>> bearing problem.
>>>
>>> report back after you've dealt with the relay, checked the
>>> distributor & checked the hose/injector squirt issues we discussed
>>> earlier.

>>
>>
>>
>> I picked up my car last night from the mechanic. (I told him I can
>> replace
>> the distributor and ECU myself, so don't fix it) Upon starting the
>> car, the
>> Check-Engine light immediately came on, and all the way home, my car
>> would
>> not go above 40 MPH, even downhill! My average speed was about
>> 25MPH. The
>> car had practically no power whatsoever; like it was running on only 2
>> out
>> of 4 cylinders. If I pressed the gas pedal down about 1/4, it would
>> backfire through the intake severely about 3 or 4 times in about 2
>> seconds.
>> If I floored it, it would smoke out the tailpipe terribly, and the
>> temperature gauge would rise to 3/4. I found pressing it down about ˝
>> way
>> was the "happy medium"; the temperature gauge stayed at the normal
>> level, it
>> didn't backfire, but it was still running VERY rich. (I could smell gas
>> from inside the car...granted I had the vent open) It will idle at a
>> relatively normal level now, but has almost no torque or horsepower. Any
>> more ideas guys?
>>
>> Thanx again! :-)
>>
>> Jonathan
>>
>> P.S. I'm going to check the distributor and main relay this weekend.
>> The
>> mechanic didn't say anything about finding any vacuum leaks.

>
>
> this is the same "highly recommended" mechanic that wanted to replace
> the ecu?
>
> jonathan, you've got to be methodical & systematic in both your
> diagnosis & repair. the symptoms you describe could be a number of
> things including skipped timing belt, messed up firing order, broken
> rotor arm, injector jammed open...
>
> 1. read the ecu codes & fix each issue as indicated. remember, 16 is
> usually main relay, not injectors. apart from that, the codes are
> reliable afaik.
>
> 2. check inside the distributor. the rotor arm breaking loose could
> account for a scraping noise, then misfire.
>
> 3. PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE take the trouble to check for the things already
> suggested before continuing to post asking for more diagnosis. it's
> pretty shabby having to guess which car you have, then have to guess a
> diagnosis for an incompletely described problem. do your homework, then
> report results so we can get to the bottom of this.
>


Well, we can eliminate the skipped timing belt and messed up firing
order. The mechanic told me he checked the timing belt and it is fine.
I also don't think the injectors are (or ever were) the problem.
(Neither does the mechanic that looked at my car) Plus, if you look at
my original message, I said, "I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking
16 times, which corresponds to the 'Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector
Circuit'. I called a few mechanics that were supposed to be 'Honda
specialists' and they all told me to change the throttle body because
the Throttle Position Sensor had gone bad and that is what was causing
the Check Engine light to come on and making the Fuel Injector stop
working." So I was simply trying to see if you agreed or disagreed with
that hypothesis. All you had to say was, "I disagree with them; I think
it's...etc." Also, after I took my car to the mechanic who said the
problem is in the distributor, and he acutally had his hands on my car,
that was more-or-less an indirect dismissal of the ideas those "other
mechanics" had.

Anyway, back to the subject: I removed the distributor today and found
that there IS some play in the rotor arm. Also, I took the cap off the
distributor to find that the contacts inside had grooves in them.
(Accompanied by a little pile of metal shavings at the bottom of the
cap) The grooves are cut about 1/4 of the way down from the top of the
contacts, almost shearing the tops off. My rotor button contact is worn
down really bad too. So with this fact in mind, would you think it's
safe to say the problem is the distributor?

Thanx,

Jonathan

P.S. I will definitely need a new cap and rotor button now, in addition
to another distributor... :-(

jim beam 03-13-2005 10:05 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
Jonathan Upright wrote:
> jim beam wrote:
>
>> K-town wrote:
>>
>>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "jim beam" <nospam@example.net>
>>> Newsgroups: alt.autos.honda
>>> Sent: Friday, March 11, 2005 10:54 PM
>>> Subject: Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> K-town wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> [Copied from original message]
>>>>>
>>>>> For about a week or so, I had noticed a scratching sort of noise
>>>>> coming
>>>>> from somewhere under the hood, but was unable to pin-point its
>>>>> location.
>>>>> There were no changes in engine performance or behavior. One
>>>>> morning,
>>>>> I was sitting at a stoplight, the engine stumbled very hard, and
>>>>> almost
>>>>> cut off. The Check-Engine light came on, and idle RPM level
>>>>> returned to
>>>>> normal. (I also noticed the scratching noise had stopped) Upon
>>>>> trying
>>>>> to accelerate, I noticed the car would not rev any higher than
>>>>> 3,500RPMs. (This is a classic symptom of the auxillary fuel injector
>>>>> not working) I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking 16 times,
>>>>> which
>>>>> corresponds to the "Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector Circuit". I
>>>>> called a
>>>>> few mechanics that were supposed to be "Honda specialists" and they
>>>>> all
>>>>> told me to change the throttle body because the Throttle Position
>>>>> Sensor
>>>>> had gone bad and that is what was causing the Check Engine light to
>>>>> come
>>>>> on and making the Fuel Injector stop working. I bought a throttle
>>>>> body
>>>>> from Beaver's Honda (junk yard) for $65 and changed it myself. Now,
>>>>> when I crank it up, it idles at almost 2,000RPMs. The idle adjuster
>>>>> screw is all the way out, so that's not causing the high idle speed.
>>>>> When the accelerator is pressed, I can hear the engine suck in a
>>>>> lot of
>>>>> air, but instead of revving up, it bogs down, and then back-fires
>>>>> through the intake. Aside from changing the throttle body, I have not
>>>>> changed any other parts.
>>>>>
>>>>> [End original message]
>>>>>
>>>>> **UPDATE**
>>>>>
>>>>> I took my car to a highly recommended mechanic and he told me that the
>>>>> problem was being caused by 2 things: #1. My distributor is not
>>>>> working
>>>>> properly. #2. Due to #1, the ECU is throwing code #16. So, he
>>>>> recommended
>>>>> replacing the distributor and the ECU. I've gotten a few responses
>>>>> to my
>>>>> original post; what do you guys think? (If you're just joining us,
>>>>> my car
>>>>> is a 1990 Civic LX, 5-speed, 1.5L Dual-Point Fuel Injection; D15B2)
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanx again! ;-)
>>>>>
>>>>> Jonathan
>>>>>
>>>>> P.S. By distributor, he means the whole thing, not just the cap.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> DO NOT, DO NOT, DO NOT replace the distributor & ecu for a code 16.
>>>> i can't tell you how many times i've seen owners get hosed for
>>>> massive amounts of money like this, & guess what? it /won't/ fix
>>>> your problem!
>>>>
>>>> as before, fix the 16 - either $55 for a new relay or $0 if you're
>>>> handy with a soldering iron, then address the other points we
>>>> discussed before. if the distributor has an electronic fault, the
>>>> car won't run at all. if it has a mechanical fault like the rotor
>>>> arm's broken loose, it's a simple fix unless it's ruined the
>>>> distributor's bearings, but that's easliy determined by taking the
>>>> distributor cap off & trying to jiggle the central shaft around.
>>>> side to side play = bearing problem.
>>>>
>>>> report back after you've dealt with the relay, checked the
>>>> distributor & checked the hose/injector squirt issues we discussed
>>>> earlier.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I picked up my car last night from the mechanic. (I told him I can
>>> replace
>>> the distributor and ECU myself, so don't fix it) Upon starting the
>>> car, the
>>> Check-Engine light immediately came on, and all the way home, my car
>>> would
>>> not go above 40 MPH, even downhill! My average speed was about
>>> 25MPH. The
>>> car had practically no power whatsoever; like it was running on only
>>> 2 out
>>> of 4 cylinders. If I pressed the gas pedal down about 1/4, it would
>>> backfire through the intake severely about 3 or 4 times in about 2
>>> seconds.
>>> If I floored it, it would smoke out the tailpipe terribly, and the
>>> temperature gauge would rise to 3/4. I found pressing it down about
>>> ˝ way
>>> was the "happy medium"; the temperature gauge stayed at the normal
>>> level, it
>>> didn't backfire, but it was still running VERY rich. (I could smell gas
>>> from inside the car...granted I had the vent open) It will idle at a
>>> relatively normal level now, but has almost no torque or horsepower.
>>> Any
>>> more ideas guys?
>>>
>>> Thanx again! :-)
>>>
>>> Jonathan
>>>
>>> P.S. I'm going to check the distributor and main relay this
>>> weekend. The
>>> mechanic didn't say anything about finding any vacuum leaks.

>>
>>
>>
>> this is the same "highly recommended" mechanic that wanted to replace
>> the ecu?
>>
>> jonathan, you've got to be methodical & systematic in both your
>> diagnosis & repair. the symptoms you describe could be a number of
>> things including skipped timing belt, messed up firing order, broken
>> rotor arm, injector jammed open...
>>
>> 1. read the ecu codes & fix each issue as indicated. remember, 16 is
>> usually main relay, not injectors. apart from that, the codes are
>> reliable afaik.
>>
>> 2. check inside the distributor. the rotor arm breaking loose could
>> account for a scraping noise, then misfire.
>>
>> 3. PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE take the trouble to check for the things
>> already suggested before continuing to post asking for more
>> diagnosis. it's pretty shabby having to guess which car you have,
>> then have to guess a diagnosis for an incompletely described problem.
>> do your homework, then report results so we can get to the bottom of
>> this.
>>

>
> Well, we can eliminate the skipped timing belt and messed up firing
> order. The mechanic told me he checked the timing belt and it is fine.


you still need to check. this is the guy that recommended the new ecu,
remember? you've got more chance of being hit by meteorite than the ecu
failing.

> I also don't think the injectors are (or ever were) the problem.
> (Neither does the mechanic that looked at my car) Plus, if you look at
> my original message, I said, "I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking
> 16 times, which corresponds to the 'Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector
> Circuit'. I called a few mechanics that were supposed to be 'Honda
> specialists' and they all told me to change the throttle body because
> the Throttle Position Sensor had gone bad and that is what was causing
> the Check Engine light to come on and making the Fuel Injector stop
> working."


that's a crock. re-solder the main relay & watch the code 16 disappear.
then tell these "honda specialists" that they don't know what they're
doing.

> So I was simply trying to see if you agreed or disagreed with
> that hypothesis. All you had to say was, "I disagree with them; I think
> it's...etc." Also, after I took my car to the mechanic who said the
> problem is in the distributor, and he acutally had his hands on my car,
> that was more-or-less an indirect dismissal of the ideas those "other
> mechanics" had.


you want free advice or not? t.p.s. is code 7. that /is/ reliably
diagnosed by the ecu. no code = no t.p.s. problem. your mechanic is
clutching at straws because they're trying not to look stupid - and
recommend spendy work at the same time.

>
> Anyway, back to the subject: I removed the distributor today and found
> that there IS some play in the rotor arm. Also, I took the cap off the
> distributor to find that the contacts inside had grooves in them.
> (Accompanied by a little pile of metal shavings at the bottom of the
> cap) The grooves are cut about 1/4 of the way down from the top of the
> contacts, almost shearing the tops off. My rotor button contact is worn
> down really bad too. So with this fact in mind, would you think it's
> safe to say the problem is the distributor?
>
> Thanx,
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. I will definitely need a new cap and rotor button now, in addition
> to another distributor... :-(


be systematic. replace the rotor & cap & see if that makes a
difference. move on from there. eliminate, eliminate, eliminate.

when you say you have play in the rotor arm, is that side to side play
in the spindle after you've taken the arm off? sometimes the rotor
plastic comes loose from its metal core - that'll save you the cost of a
new one.

you're in "rip-em-off" territory here. be careful.


jim beam 03-13-2005 10:05 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
Jonathan Upright wrote:
> jim beam wrote:
>
>> K-town wrote:
>>
>>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "jim beam" <nospam@example.net>
>>> Newsgroups: alt.autos.honda
>>> Sent: Friday, March 11, 2005 10:54 PM
>>> Subject: Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> K-town wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> [Copied from original message]
>>>>>
>>>>> For about a week or so, I had noticed a scratching sort of noise
>>>>> coming
>>>>> from somewhere under the hood, but was unable to pin-point its
>>>>> location.
>>>>> There were no changes in engine performance or behavior. One
>>>>> morning,
>>>>> I was sitting at a stoplight, the engine stumbled very hard, and
>>>>> almost
>>>>> cut off. The Check-Engine light came on, and idle RPM level
>>>>> returned to
>>>>> normal. (I also noticed the scratching noise had stopped) Upon
>>>>> trying
>>>>> to accelerate, I noticed the car would not rev any higher than
>>>>> 3,500RPMs. (This is a classic symptom of the auxillary fuel injector
>>>>> not working) I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking 16 times,
>>>>> which
>>>>> corresponds to the "Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector Circuit". I
>>>>> called a
>>>>> few mechanics that were supposed to be "Honda specialists" and they
>>>>> all
>>>>> told me to change the throttle body because the Throttle Position
>>>>> Sensor
>>>>> had gone bad and that is what was causing the Check Engine light to
>>>>> come
>>>>> on and making the Fuel Injector stop working. I bought a throttle
>>>>> body
>>>>> from Beaver's Honda (junk yard) for $65 and changed it myself. Now,
>>>>> when I crank it up, it idles at almost 2,000RPMs. The idle adjuster
>>>>> screw is all the way out, so that's not causing the high idle speed.
>>>>> When the accelerator is pressed, I can hear the engine suck in a
>>>>> lot of
>>>>> air, but instead of revving up, it bogs down, and then back-fires
>>>>> through the intake. Aside from changing the throttle body, I have not
>>>>> changed any other parts.
>>>>>
>>>>> [End original message]
>>>>>
>>>>> **UPDATE**
>>>>>
>>>>> I took my car to a highly recommended mechanic and he told me that the
>>>>> problem was being caused by 2 things: #1. My distributor is not
>>>>> working
>>>>> properly. #2. Due to #1, the ECU is throwing code #16. So, he
>>>>> recommended
>>>>> replacing the distributor and the ECU. I've gotten a few responses
>>>>> to my
>>>>> original post; what do you guys think? (If you're just joining us,
>>>>> my car
>>>>> is a 1990 Civic LX, 5-speed, 1.5L Dual-Point Fuel Injection; D15B2)
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanx again! ;-)
>>>>>
>>>>> Jonathan
>>>>>
>>>>> P.S. By distributor, he means the whole thing, not just the cap.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> DO NOT, DO NOT, DO NOT replace the distributor & ecu for a code 16.
>>>> i can't tell you how many times i've seen owners get hosed for
>>>> massive amounts of money like this, & guess what? it /won't/ fix
>>>> your problem!
>>>>
>>>> as before, fix the 16 - either $55 for a new relay or $0 if you're
>>>> handy with a soldering iron, then address the other points we
>>>> discussed before. if the distributor has an electronic fault, the
>>>> car won't run at all. if it has a mechanical fault like the rotor
>>>> arm's broken loose, it's a simple fix unless it's ruined the
>>>> distributor's bearings, but that's easliy determined by taking the
>>>> distributor cap off & trying to jiggle the central shaft around.
>>>> side to side play = bearing problem.
>>>>
>>>> report back after you've dealt with the relay, checked the
>>>> distributor & checked the hose/injector squirt issues we discussed
>>>> earlier.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I picked up my car last night from the mechanic. (I told him I can
>>> replace
>>> the distributor and ECU myself, so don't fix it) Upon starting the
>>> car, the
>>> Check-Engine light immediately came on, and all the way home, my car
>>> would
>>> not go above 40 MPH, even downhill! My average speed was about
>>> 25MPH. The
>>> car had practically no power whatsoever; like it was running on only
>>> 2 out
>>> of 4 cylinders. If I pressed the gas pedal down about 1/4, it would
>>> backfire through the intake severely about 3 or 4 times in about 2
>>> seconds.
>>> If I floored it, it would smoke out the tailpipe terribly, and the
>>> temperature gauge would rise to 3/4. I found pressing it down about
>>> ˝ way
>>> was the "happy medium"; the temperature gauge stayed at the normal
>>> level, it
>>> didn't backfire, but it was still running VERY rich. (I could smell gas
>>> from inside the car...granted I had the vent open) It will idle at a
>>> relatively normal level now, but has almost no torque or horsepower.
>>> Any
>>> more ideas guys?
>>>
>>> Thanx again! :-)
>>>
>>> Jonathan
>>>
>>> P.S. I'm going to check the distributor and main relay this
>>> weekend. The
>>> mechanic didn't say anything about finding any vacuum leaks.

>>
>>
>>
>> this is the same "highly recommended" mechanic that wanted to replace
>> the ecu?
>>
>> jonathan, you've got to be methodical & systematic in both your
>> diagnosis & repair. the symptoms you describe could be a number of
>> things including skipped timing belt, messed up firing order, broken
>> rotor arm, injector jammed open...
>>
>> 1. read the ecu codes & fix each issue as indicated. remember, 16 is
>> usually main relay, not injectors. apart from that, the codes are
>> reliable afaik.
>>
>> 2. check inside the distributor. the rotor arm breaking loose could
>> account for a scraping noise, then misfire.
>>
>> 3. PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE take the trouble to check for the things
>> already suggested before continuing to post asking for more
>> diagnosis. it's pretty shabby having to guess which car you have,
>> then have to guess a diagnosis for an incompletely described problem.
>> do your homework, then report results so we can get to the bottom of
>> this.
>>

>
> Well, we can eliminate the skipped timing belt and messed up firing
> order. The mechanic told me he checked the timing belt and it is fine.


you still need to check. this is the guy that recommended the new ecu,
remember? you've got more chance of being hit by meteorite than the ecu
failing.

> I also don't think the injectors are (or ever were) the problem.
> (Neither does the mechanic that looked at my car) Plus, if you look at
> my original message, I said, "I checked the ECU and the LED was blinking
> 16 times, which corresponds to the 'Fuel Injector or Fuel Injector
> Circuit'. I called a few mechanics that were supposed to be 'Honda
> specialists' and they all told me to change the throttle body because
> the Throttle Position Sensor had gone bad and that is what was causing
> the Check Engine light to come on and making the Fuel Injector stop
> working."


that's a crock. re-solder the main relay & watch the code 16 disappear.
then tell these "honda specialists" that they don't know what they're
doing.

> So I was simply trying to see if you agreed or disagreed with
> that hypothesis. All you had to say was, "I disagree with them; I think
> it's...etc." Also, after I took my car to the mechanic who said the
> problem is in the distributor, and he acutally had his hands on my car,
> that was more-or-less an indirect dismissal of the ideas those "other
> mechanics" had.


you want free advice or not? t.p.s. is code 7. that /is/ reliably
diagnosed by the ecu. no code = no t.p.s. problem. your mechanic is
clutching at straws because they're trying not to look stupid - and
recommend spendy work at the same time.

>
> Anyway, back to the subject: I removed the distributor today and found
> that there IS some play in the rotor arm. Also, I took the cap off the
> distributor to find that the contacts inside had grooves in them.
> (Accompanied by a little pile of metal shavings at the bottom of the
> cap) The grooves are cut about 1/4 of the way down from the top of the
> contacts, almost shearing the tops off. My rotor button contact is worn
> down really bad too. So with this fact in mind, would you think it's
> safe to say the problem is the distributor?
>
> Thanx,
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. I will definitely need a new cap and rotor button now, in addition
> to another distributor... :-(


be systematic. replace the rotor & cap & see if that makes a
difference. move on from there. eliminate, eliminate, eliminate.

when you say you have play in the rotor arm, is that side to side play
in the spindle after you've taken the arm off? sometimes the rotor
plastic comes loose from its metal core - that'll save you the cost of a
new one.

you're in "rip-em-off" territory here. be careful.


Randolph 03-13-2005 10:48 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
Jonathan Upright wrote:

<snip>

> Anyway, back to the subject: I removed the distributor today and found
> that there IS some play in the rotor arm. Also, I took the cap off the
> distributor to find that the contacts inside had grooves in them.
> (Accompanied by a little pile of metal shavings at the bottom of the
> cap) The grooves are cut about 1/4 of the way down from the top of the
> contacts, almost shearing the tops off. My rotor button contact is worn
> down really bad too. So with this fact in mind, would you think it's
> safe to say the problem is the distributor?


It certainly seems you have a problem with the distributor. The contacts
in the cap should not touch the rotor at all, so if the rotor has ground
grooves in the contacts, something is wrong. I have never touched the
distributor on my Honda, but from other cars I know that it can take
quite a bit of force to get the rotor properly seated. Perhaps the rotor
was improperly installed or has come loose?

When you say there is some play in the rotor, how much is "some"? Is it
the rotor that moves on the shaft, or can you wiggle the entire shaft?

I completely agree with Jim Beam and others who say your ECU does not
need replacement. Sensors and actuators are much more likely to fail
than the ECU.

====
A very modest collection of Honda tech info can be found at:
http://www.geocities.com/ng_randolph

Randolph 03-13-2005 10:48 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
Jonathan Upright wrote:

<snip>

> Anyway, back to the subject: I removed the distributor today and found
> that there IS some play in the rotor arm. Also, I took the cap off the
> distributor to find that the contacts inside had grooves in them.
> (Accompanied by a little pile of metal shavings at the bottom of the
> cap) The grooves are cut about 1/4 of the way down from the top of the
> contacts, almost shearing the tops off. My rotor button contact is worn
> down really bad too. So with this fact in mind, would you think it's
> safe to say the problem is the distributor?


It certainly seems you have a problem with the distributor. The contacts
in the cap should not touch the rotor at all, so if the rotor has ground
grooves in the contacts, something is wrong. I have never touched the
distributor on my Honda, but from other cars I know that it can take
quite a bit of force to get the rotor properly seated. Perhaps the rotor
was improperly installed or has come loose?

When you say there is some play in the rotor, how much is "some"? Is it
the rotor that moves on the shaft, or can you wiggle the entire shaft?

I completely agree with Jim Beam and others who say your ECU does not
need replacement. Sensors and actuators are much more likely to fail
than the ECU.

====
A very modest collection of Honda tech info can be found at:
http://www.geocities.com/ng_randolph

Michael Pardee 03-14-2005 07:50 AM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"Jonathan Upright" <qaesar1@carolina.rr.com> wrote in message
news:Xp2Zd.25911$_i3.836346@twister.southeast.rr.c om...
>
> Anyway, back to the subject: I removed the distributor today and found
> that there IS some play in the rotor arm. Also, I took the cap off the
> distributor to find that the contacts inside had grooves in them.
> (Accompanied by a little pile of metal shavings at the bottom of the cap)
> The grooves are cut about 1/4 of the way down from the top of the
> contacts, almost shearing the tops off. My rotor button contact is worn
> down really bad too. So with this fact in mind, would you think it's safe
> to say the problem is the distributor?
>
> Thanx,
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. I will definitely need a new cap and rotor button now, in addition
> to another distributor... :-(


It sounds like the distributor does need to be replaced, based on the visual
inspection. Whether that is your fundamental problem is another story.

The ECU code indicates the ECU is unable to set a correct mixture, for
whatever reason. Normal distributor problems will not cause that, although
if the abnormal wear is causing the timing to be erratic (*something* is
very wrong, we already know) it could cause the ECU to complain the mixture
is all over the chart - Error 16.

There are two critical diagnostics I'm not seeing here - ignition timing and
fuel pressure.

The timing will tell the story on how much the distributor is contributing
to the problem. If the timing mark hops around like a fountain in a strobe
light - no two flashes near each other - the engine won't run right until
the distributor is replaced. If the mark shifts with the engine speed's
wobbles but isn't being any wilder than the engine is, the distributor may
be bad but it isn't what is driving your symptoms.

The fuel pressure will tell you if the injectors are getting a steady supply
of fuel. With the vacuum line (I assume your model has one - most do)
detached from the fuel pressure regulator the fuel pressure should be steady
as a rock. If not, "jim beam" is on target about the main relay or possibly
the fuel pump. Of couse, if the pressure is way high the regulator itself is
bad.

You could spend a dismaying amount of money letting mechanics (and us) guess
for lack of a couple of diagnostics to tell us all what is good or bad.

Mike



Michael Pardee 03-14-2005 07:50 AM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"Jonathan Upright" <qaesar1@carolina.rr.com> wrote in message
news:Xp2Zd.25911$_i3.836346@twister.southeast.rr.c om...
>
> Anyway, back to the subject: I removed the distributor today and found
> that there IS some play in the rotor arm. Also, I took the cap off the
> distributor to find that the contacts inside had grooves in them.
> (Accompanied by a little pile of metal shavings at the bottom of the cap)
> The grooves are cut about 1/4 of the way down from the top of the
> contacts, almost shearing the tops off. My rotor button contact is worn
> down really bad too. So with this fact in mind, would you think it's safe
> to say the problem is the distributor?
>
> Thanx,
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. I will definitely need a new cap and rotor button now, in addition
> to another distributor... :-(


It sounds like the distributor does need to be replaced, based on the visual
inspection. Whether that is your fundamental problem is another story.

The ECU code indicates the ECU is unable to set a correct mixture, for
whatever reason. Normal distributor problems will not cause that, although
if the abnormal wear is causing the timing to be erratic (*something* is
very wrong, we already know) it could cause the ECU to complain the mixture
is all over the chart - Error 16.

There are two critical diagnostics I'm not seeing here - ignition timing and
fuel pressure.

The timing will tell the story on how much the distributor is contributing
to the problem. If the timing mark hops around like a fountain in a strobe
light - no two flashes near each other - the engine won't run right until
the distributor is replaced. If the mark shifts with the engine speed's
wobbles but isn't being any wilder than the engine is, the distributor may
be bad but it isn't what is driving your symptoms.

The fuel pressure will tell you if the injectors are getting a steady supply
of fuel. With the vacuum line (I assume your model has one - most do)
detached from the fuel pressure regulator the fuel pressure should be steady
as a rock. If not, "jim beam" is on target about the main relay or possibly
the fuel pump. Of couse, if the pressure is way high the regulator itself is
bad.

You could spend a dismaying amount of money letting mechanics (and us) guess
for lack of a couple of diagnostics to tell us all what is good or bad.

Mike



K-town 03-14-2005 09:54 AM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"jim beam" <nospam@example.net> wrote in message
news:1110769537.d5025d41798231294c66400351221d25@t eranews...
> Jonathan Upright wrote:

<snip>

> be systematic. replace the rotor & cap & see if that makes a difference.
> move on from there. eliminate, eliminate, eliminate.


But if the rotor arm is loose, I would ruin another new cap and rotor,
causing me to waste $35. Your approach is logical, but I have to weigh my
options on this, keeping my tight budget in mind. (See below)

> when you say you have play in the rotor arm, is that side to side play in
> the spindle after you've taken the arm off? sometimes the rotor plastic
> comes loose from its metal core - that'll save you the cost of a new one.


Yes, the whole thing is loose. I made sure it wasn't just play in the rotor
button itself. The spindle on the inside will move back and forth about
2-3mm in any and every direction. I assume it's not supposed to do that? I
also noticed this, when I turn the distributor, it makes the EXACT same
scratching noise I heard before these problems started. Is it supposed to
make a scratching noise when you turn it? (I never heard a scratching noise
before, but I've never taken a distributor off before and turned it by hand
either)

> you're in "rip-em-off" territory here. be careful.


Well, I found a good used distributor on eBay for $27.75 (after shipping)
which I've already bought. (MUCH better than $135 at a junk yard...rotor
and cap included...that's cheaper than a brand-new cap and rotor at Advance
Auto) I'm going to install it and see what happens. I hope to receive the
item by the end of this week and will report back the results. Since I'm
doing all the work myself, the only way I could get "ripped off" is through
unnecessary, but relatively inexpensive parts. Luckily, one of the guys
that works at the junk yard where I got the [unnecessary] throttle body goes
to my church, and he's going to let me exchange it for any other part(s) I
need that costs the same. (They usually don't do exchanges...it pays to
know the right people) ;-)

Thanks again for all your help! :-)

Jonathan



K-town 03-14-2005 09:54 AM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"Randolph" <trash@junkmail.com> wrote in message
news:423509A1.F71F2767@junkmail.com...
> Jonathan Upright wrote:
>
> <snip>
>
>> Anyway, back to the subject: I removed the distributor today and found
>> that there IS some play in the rotor arm. Also, I took the cap off the
>> distributor to find that the contacts inside had grooves in them.
>> (Accompanied by a little pile of metal shavings at the bottom of the
>> cap) The grooves are cut about 1/4 of the way down from the top of the
>> contacts, almost shearing the tops off. My rotor button contact is worn
>> down really bad too. So with this fact in mind, would you think it's
>> safe to say the problem is the distributor?

>
> It certainly seems you have a problem with the distributor. The contacts
> in the cap should not touch the rotor at all, so if the rotor has ground
> grooves in the contacts, something is wrong. I have never touched the
> distributor on my Honda, but from other cars I know that it can take
> quite a bit of force to get the rotor properly seated. Perhaps the rotor
> was improperly installed or has come loose?
>
> When you say there is some play in the rotor, how much is "some"? Is it
> the rotor that moves on the shaft, or can you wiggle the entire shaft?
>
> I completely agree with Jim Beam and others who say your ECU does not
> need replacement. Sensors and actuators are much more likely to fail
> than the ECU.


[See response I wrote to "Jim Beam"]



K-town 03-14-2005 09:54 AM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"Michael Pardee" <michaeltnull@cybertrails.com> wrote in message
news:VMudnYDVm_kXFajfRVn-ow@sedona.net...
> "Jonathan Upright" <qaesar1@carolina.rr.com> wrote in message
> news:Xp2Zd.25911$_i3.836346@twister.southeast.rr.c om...
>>
>> Anyway, back to the subject: I removed the distributor today and found
>> that there IS some play in the rotor arm. Also, I took the cap off the
>> distributor to find that the contacts inside had grooves in them.
>> (Accompanied by a little pile of metal shavings at the bottom of the cap)
>> The grooves are cut about 1/4 of the way down from the top of the
>> contacts, almost shearing the tops off. My rotor button contact is worn
>> down really bad too. So with this fact in mind, would you think it's
>> safe to say the problem is the distributor?
>>
>> Thanx,
>>
>> Jonathan
>>
>> P.S. I will definitely need a new cap and rotor button now, in addition
>> to another distributor... :-(

>
> It sounds like the distributor does need to be replaced, based on the
> visual inspection. Whether that is your fundamental problem is another
> story.
>
> The ECU code indicates the ECU is unable to set a correct mixture, for
> whatever reason. Normal distributor problems will not cause that, although
> if the abnormal wear is causing the timing to be erratic (*something* is
> very wrong, we already know) it could cause the ECU to complain the
> mixture is all over the chart - Error 16.
>
> There are two critical diagnostics I'm not seeing here - ignition timing
> and fuel pressure.
>
> The timing will tell the story on how much the distributor is contributing
> to the problem. If the timing mark hops around like a fountain in a strobe
> light - no two flashes near each other - the engine won't run right until
> the distributor is replaced. If the mark shifts with the engine speed's
> wobbles but isn't being any wilder than the engine is, the distributor may
> be bad but it isn't what is driving your symptoms.
>
> The fuel pressure will tell you if the injectors are getting a steady
> supply of fuel. With the vacuum line (I assume your model has one - most
> do) detached from the fuel pressure regulator the fuel pressure should be
> steady as a rock. If not, "jim beam" is on target about the main relay or
> possibly the fuel pump. Of couse, if the pressure is way high the
> regulator itself is bad.
>
> You could spend a dismaying amount of money letting mechanics (and us)
> guess for lack of a couple of diagnostics to tell us all what is good or
> bad.
>
> Mike


[See response I wrote to "Jim Beam"]



K-town 03-14-2005 09:54 AM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"Randolph" <trash@junkmail.com> wrote in message
news:423509A1.F71F2767@junkmail.com...
> Jonathan Upright wrote:
>
> <snip>
>
>> Anyway, back to the subject: I removed the distributor today and found
>> that there IS some play in the rotor arm. Also, I took the cap off the
>> distributor to find that the contacts inside had grooves in them.
>> (Accompanied by a little pile of metal shavings at the bottom of the
>> cap) The grooves are cut about 1/4 of the way down from the top of the
>> contacts, almost shearing the tops off. My rotor button contact is worn
>> down really bad too. So with this fact in mind, would you think it's
>> safe to say the problem is the distributor?

>
> It certainly seems you have a problem with the distributor. The contacts
> in the cap should not touch the rotor at all, so if the rotor has ground
> grooves in the contacts, something is wrong. I have never touched the
> distributor on my Honda, but from other cars I know that it can take
> quite a bit of force to get the rotor properly seated. Perhaps the rotor
> was improperly installed or has come loose?
>
> When you say there is some play in the rotor, how much is "some"? Is it
> the rotor that moves on the shaft, or can you wiggle the entire shaft?
>
> I completely agree with Jim Beam and others who say your ECU does not
> need replacement. Sensors and actuators are much more likely to fail
> than the ECU.


[See response I wrote to "Jim Beam"]



K-town 03-14-2005 09:54 AM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"Michael Pardee" <michaeltnull@cybertrails.com> wrote in message
news:VMudnYDVm_kXFajfRVn-ow@sedona.net...
> "Jonathan Upright" <qaesar1@carolina.rr.com> wrote in message
> news:Xp2Zd.25911$_i3.836346@twister.southeast.rr.c om...
>>
>> Anyway, back to the subject: I removed the distributor today and found
>> that there IS some play in the rotor arm. Also, I took the cap off the
>> distributor to find that the contacts inside had grooves in them.
>> (Accompanied by a little pile of metal shavings at the bottom of the cap)
>> The grooves are cut about 1/4 of the way down from the top of the
>> contacts, almost shearing the tops off. My rotor button contact is worn
>> down really bad too. So with this fact in mind, would you think it's
>> safe to say the problem is the distributor?
>>
>> Thanx,
>>
>> Jonathan
>>
>> P.S. I will definitely need a new cap and rotor button now, in addition
>> to another distributor... :-(

>
> It sounds like the distributor does need to be replaced, based on the
> visual inspection. Whether that is your fundamental problem is another
> story.
>
> The ECU code indicates the ECU is unable to set a correct mixture, for
> whatever reason. Normal distributor problems will not cause that, although
> if the abnormal wear is causing the timing to be erratic (*something* is
> very wrong, we already know) it could cause the ECU to complain the
> mixture is all over the chart - Error 16.
>
> There are two critical diagnostics I'm not seeing here - ignition timing
> and fuel pressure.
>
> The timing will tell the story on how much the distributor is contributing
> to the problem. If the timing mark hops around like a fountain in a strobe
> light - no two flashes near each other - the engine won't run right until
> the distributor is replaced. If the mark shifts with the engine speed's
> wobbles but isn't being any wilder than the engine is, the distributor may
> be bad but it isn't what is driving your symptoms.
>
> The fuel pressure will tell you if the injectors are getting a steady
> supply of fuel. With the vacuum line (I assume your model has one - most
> do) detached from the fuel pressure regulator the fuel pressure should be
> steady as a rock. If not, "jim beam" is on target about the main relay or
> possibly the fuel pump. Of couse, if the pressure is way high the
> regulator itself is bad.
>
> You could spend a dismaying amount of money letting mechanics (and us)
> guess for lack of a couple of diagnostics to tell us all what is good or
> bad.
>
> Mike


[See response I wrote to "Jim Beam"]



K-town 03-14-2005 09:54 AM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"jim beam" <nospam@example.net> wrote in message
news:1110769537.d5025d41798231294c66400351221d25@t eranews...
> Jonathan Upright wrote:

<snip>

> be systematic. replace the rotor & cap & see if that makes a difference.
> move on from there. eliminate, eliminate, eliminate.


But if the rotor arm is loose, I would ruin another new cap and rotor,
causing me to waste $35. Your approach is logical, but I have to weigh my
options on this, keeping my tight budget in mind. (See below)

> when you say you have play in the rotor arm, is that side to side play in
> the spindle after you've taken the arm off? sometimes the rotor plastic
> comes loose from its metal core - that'll save you the cost of a new one.


Yes, the whole thing is loose. I made sure it wasn't just play in the rotor
button itself. The spindle on the inside will move back and forth about
2-3mm in any and every direction. I assume it's not supposed to do that? I
also noticed this, when I turn the distributor, it makes the EXACT same
scratching noise I heard before these problems started. Is it supposed to
make a scratching noise when you turn it? (I never heard a scratching noise
before, but I've never taken a distributor off before and turned it by hand
either)

> you're in "rip-em-off" territory here. be careful.


Well, I found a good used distributor on eBay for $27.75 (after shipping)
which I've already bought. (MUCH better than $135 at a junk yard...rotor
and cap included...that's cheaper than a brand-new cap and rotor at Advance
Auto) I'm going to install it and see what happens. I hope to receive the
item by the end of this week and will report back the results. Since I'm
doing all the work myself, the only way I could get "ripped off" is through
unnecessary, but relatively inexpensive parts. Luckily, one of the guys
that works at the junk yard where I got the [unnecessary] throttle body goes
to my church, and he's going to let me exchange it for any other part(s) I
need that costs the same. (They usually don't do exchanges...it pays to
know the right people) ;-)

Thanks again for all your help! :-)

Jonathan



Jonathan Upright 03-14-2005 10:20 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
One other thing I meant to mention in my previous post. There was also
a small amount of oil INSIDE the distributor cap. Don't know how long
it had been in there, but if I had to guess at the amount, I'd have to
say about 2-3 drops worth. (Drop = same amount as if you were using an
eye-dropper or a syringe without a needle) I know oil in the cap is bad
news, and there is only 1 way it could have gotten in there...by going
through the distributor somehow. (I checked the cap, it was NOT loose or
cracked)

Thanx again! :-)

Jonathan

Jonathan Upright 03-14-2005 10:20 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
One other thing I meant to mention in my previous post. There was also
a small amount of oil INSIDE the distributor cap. Don't know how long
it had been in there, but if I had to guess at the amount, I'd have to
say about 2-3 drops worth. (Drop = same amount as if you were using an
eye-dropper or a syringe without a needle) I know oil in the cap is bad
news, and there is only 1 way it could have gotten in there...by going
through the distributor somehow. (I checked the cap, it was NOT loose or
cracked)

Thanx again! :-)

Jonathan

jim beam 03-15-2005 12:30 AM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
K-town wrote:
> "jim beam" <nospam@example.net> wrote in message
> news:1110769537.d5025d41798231294c66400351221d25@t eranews...
>
>>Jonathan Upright wrote:

>
> <snip>
>
>>be systematic. replace the rotor & cap & see if that makes a difference.
>>move on from there. eliminate, eliminate, eliminate.

>
>
> But if the rotor arm is loose, I would ruin another new cap and rotor,
> causing me to waste $35. Your approach is logical, but I have to weigh my
> options on this, keeping my tight budget in mind. (See below)
>
>
>>when you say you have play in the rotor arm, is that side to side play in
>>the spindle after you've taken the arm off? sometimes the rotor plastic
>>comes loose from its metal core - that'll save you the cost of a new one.

>
>
> Yes, the whole thing is loose. I made sure it wasn't just play in the rotor
> button itself. The spindle on the inside will move back and forth about
> 2-3mm in any and every direction. I assume it's not supposed to do that?


no. if the spindle is all sloppy, a new distributor is required as the
bearings are not user servicable. when you get your new one, be sure to
replace the rotor & cap - the rotor has been redesigned to help lessen
the chances of this happening & the cap's been redesigned accordingly.

> I
> also noticed this, when I turn the distributor, it makes the EXACT same
> scratching noise I heard before these problems started. Is it supposed to
> make a scratching noise when you turn it? (I never heard a scratching noise
> before, but I've never taken a distributor off before and turned it by hand
> either)
>
>
>>you're in "rip-em-off" territory here. be careful.

>
>
> Well, I found a good used distributor on eBay for $27.75 (after shipping)
> which I've already bought. (MUCH better than $135 at a junk yard...rotor
> and cap included...that's cheaper than a brand-new cap and rotor at Advance
> Auto) I'm going to install it and see what happens. I hope to receive the
> item by the end of this week and will report back the results. Since I'm
> doing all the work myself, the only way I could get "ripped off" is through
> unnecessary, but relatively inexpensive parts. Luckily, one of the guys
> that works at the junk yard where I got the [unnecessary] throttle body goes
> to my church, and he's going to let me exchange it for any other part(s) I
> need that costs the same. (They usually don't do exchanges...it pays to
> know the right people) ;-)
>
> Thanks again for all your help! :-)
>
> Jonathan
>
>

don't forget to resolder your main relay!


jim beam 03-15-2005 12:30 AM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
K-town wrote:
> "jim beam" <nospam@example.net> wrote in message
> news:1110769537.d5025d41798231294c66400351221d25@t eranews...
>
>>Jonathan Upright wrote:

>
> <snip>
>
>>be systematic. replace the rotor & cap & see if that makes a difference.
>>move on from there. eliminate, eliminate, eliminate.

>
>
> But if the rotor arm is loose, I would ruin another new cap and rotor,
> causing me to waste $35. Your approach is logical, but I have to weigh my
> options on this, keeping my tight budget in mind. (See below)
>
>
>>when you say you have play in the rotor arm, is that side to side play in
>>the spindle after you've taken the arm off? sometimes the rotor plastic
>>comes loose from its metal core - that'll save you the cost of a new one.

>
>
> Yes, the whole thing is loose. I made sure it wasn't just play in the rotor
> button itself. The spindle on the inside will move back and forth about
> 2-3mm in any and every direction. I assume it's not supposed to do that?


no. if the spindle is all sloppy, a new distributor is required as the
bearings are not user servicable. when you get your new one, be sure to
replace the rotor & cap - the rotor has been redesigned to help lessen
the chances of this happening & the cap's been redesigned accordingly.

> I
> also noticed this, when I turn the distributor, it makes the EXACT same
> scratching noise I heard before these problems started. Is it supposed to
> make a scratching noise when you turn it? (I never heard a scratching noise
> before, but I've never taken a distributor off before and turned it by hand
> either)
>
>
>>you're in "rip-em-off" territory here. be careful.

>
>
> Well, I found a good used distributor on eBay for $27.75 (after shipping)
> which I've already bought. (MUCH better than $135 at a junk yard...rotor
> and cap included...that's cheaper than a brand-new cap and rotor at Advance
> Auto) I'm going to install it and see what happens. I hope to receive the
> item by the end of this week and will report back the results. Since I'm
> doing all the work myself, the only way I could get "ripped off" is through
> unnecessary, but relatively inexpensive parts. Luckily, one of the guys
> that works at the junk yard where I got the [unnecessary] throttle body goes
> to my church, and he's going to let me exchange it for any other part(s) I
> need that costs the same. (They usually don't do exchanges...it pays to
> know the right people) ;-)
>
> Thanks again for all your help! :-)
>
> Jonathan
>
>

don't forget to resolder your main relay!


K-town 03-15-2005 11:23 AM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
<snip>
> don't forget to resolder your main relay!

</snip>

Sorry, but my memory isn't the best. Why do I need to do this? Is there a
way to check the main relay to see if it's good or bad before taking it
apart and resoldering? Besides the fuel pump, what else does the main relay
control? I know there is a slight problem with my main relay because
sometimes when it's hot inside the car, it won't click when the check-engine
light goes off, and of course, the car won't start. I have to squeeze the
main relay and hold it to make it click so my car will fire up.

Thanx again! :-)

Jonathan

P.S. The last 2 sentences have been going on for awhile, and may not be
directly related to my current problem.



K-town 03-15-2005 11:23 AM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
<snip>
> don't forget to resolder your main relay!

</snip>

Sorry, but my memory isn't the best. Why do I need to do this? Is there a
way to check the main relay to see if it's good or bad before taking it
apart and resoldering? Besides the fuel pump, what else does the main relay
control? I know there is a slight problem with my main relay because
sometimes when it's hot inside the car, it won't click when the check-engine
light goes off, and of course, the car won't start. I have to squeeze the
main relay and hold it to make it click so my car will fire up.

Thanx again! :-)

Jonathan

P.S. The last 2 sentences have been going on for awhile, and may not be
directly related to my current problem.



motsco_ _ 03-15-2005 12:16 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
K-town wrote:
> <snip>
>
>>don't forget to resolder your main relay!

>
> </snip>
>
> Sorry, but my memory isn't the best. Why do I need to do this? Is there a
> way to check the main relay to see if it's good or bad before taking it
> apart and resoldering? Besides the fuel pump, what else does the main relay
> control? I know there is a slight problem with my main relay because
> sometimes when it's hot inside the car, it won't click when the check-engine
> light goes off, and of course, the car won't start. I have to squeeze the
> main relay and hold it to make it click so my car will fire up.
>
> Thanx again! :-)
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. The last 2 sentences have been going on for awhile, and may not be
> directly related to my current problem.
>


--------------------------

You've described a 'textbook case' of main relay failure. Resolder it
and you'll overcome a major headache. Meantime, don't lend your Honda to
somebody who is trying to go somewhere important. :-)

'Curly'


motsco_ _ 03-15-2005 12:16 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
K-town wrote:
> <snip>
>
>>don't forget to resolder your main relay!

>
> </snip>
>
> Sorry, but my memory isn't the best. Why do I need to do this? Is there a
> way to check the main relay to see if it's good or bad before taking it
> apart and resoldering? Besides the fuel pump, what else does the main relay
> control? I know there is a slight problem with my main relay because
> sometimes when it's hot inside the car, it won't click when the check-engine
> light goes off, and of course, the car won't start. I have to squeeze the
> main relay and hold it to make it click so my car will fire up.
>
> Thanx again! :-)
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. The last 2 sentences have been going on for awhile, and may not be
> directly related to my current problem.
>


--------------------------

You've described a 'textbook case' of main relay failure. Resolder it
and you'll overcome a major headache. Meantime, don't lend your Honda to
somebody who is trying to go somewhere important. :-)

'Curly'


Michael Pardee 03-15-2005 07:23 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"K-town" <none_of@your.biz> wrote in message
news:z_DZd.29209$_i3.1160255@twister.southeast.rr. com...
> <snip>
>> don't forget to resolder your main relay!

> </snip>
>
> Sorry, but my memory isn't the best. Why do I need to do this? Is there
> a way to check the main relay to see if it's good or bad before taking it
> apart and resoldering? Besides the fuel pump, what else does the main
> relay control? I know there is a slight problem with my main relay
> because sometimes when it's hot inside the car, it won't click when the
> check-engine light goes off, and of course, the car won't start. I have
> to squeeze the main relay and hold it to make it click so my car will fire
> up.
>
> Thanx again! :-)
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. The last 2 sentences have been going on for awhile, and may not be
> directly related to my current problem.
>

The relay controls the fuel pump, and if the power to the pump is
intermittent it will cause the ECU to report problems with the fuel
injectors (sound familiar?) and the engine to run very badly. A guage on the
fuel rail to measure the fuel pressure will tell everything about the fuel
delivery system - including the main relay - and what part it plays (if any)
in your symptoms.

You already know from visual inspection the distributor is bad and from
history the main relay is bad. Replacing the distributor and resoldering or
replacing the main relay could very well be all you need to get back on the
road. If not, at least those known bad parts won't be making you crazy any
more.

Mike



Michael Pardee 03-15-2005 07:23 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"K-town" <none_of@your.biz> wrote in message
news:z_DZd.29209$_i3.1160255@twister.southeast.rr. com...
> <snip>
>> don't forget to resolder your main relay!

> </snip>
>
> Sorry, but my memory isn't the best. Why do I need to do this? Is there
> a way to check the main relay to see if it's good or bad before taking it
> apart and resoldering? Besides the fuel pump, what else does the main
> relay control? I know there is a slight problem with my main relay
> because sometimes when it's hot inside the car, it won't click when the
> check-engine light goes off, and of course, the car won't start. I have
> to squeeze the main relay and hold it to make it click so my car will fire
> up.
>
> Thanx again! :-)
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. The last 2 sentences have been going on for awhile, and may not be
> directly related to my current problem.
>

The relay controls the fuel pump, and if the power to the pump is
intermittent it will cause the ECU to report problems with the fuel
injectors (sound familiar?) and the engine to run very badly. A guage on the
fuel rail to measure the fuel pressure will tell everything about the fuel
delivery system - including the main relay - and what part it plays (if any)
in your symptoms.

You already know from visual inspection the distributor is bad and from
history the main relay is bad. Replacing the distributor and resoldering or
replacing the main relay could very well be all you need to get back on the
road. If not, at least those known bad parts won't be making you crazy any
more.

Mike



TeGGer® 03-15-2005 08:42 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"Michael Pardee" <michaeltnull@cybertrails.com> wrote in
news:IoCdnftUKZjr4arfRVn-tA@sedona.net:


> The relay controls the fuel pump, and if the power to the pump is
> intermittent it will cause the ECU to report problems with the fuel
> injectors (sound familiar?) and the engine to run very badly.




The injectors themselves receive their power from termianl 3 on the Main
Relay. All the ECU does is ground them as needed, causing current to flow.

If the solder is cracked and terminal 3 fails to provide power to the
injectors, the ECU sees a no-voltage when it tries to ground the injectors
and sets a code 16.


--
TeGGeR®

The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
www.tegger.com/hondafaq/

TeGGer® 03-15-2005 08:42 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"Michael Pardee" <michaeltnull@cybertrails.com> wrote in
news:IoCdnftUKZjr4arfRVn-tA@sedona.net:


> The relay controls the fuel pump, and if the power to the pump is
> intermittent it will cause the ECU to report problems with the fuel
> injectors (sound familiar?) and the engine to run very badly.




The injectors themselves receive their power from termianl 3 on the Main
Relay. All the ECU does is ground them as needed, causing current to flow.

If the solder is cracked and terminal 3 fails to provide power to the
injectors, the ECU sees a no-voltage when it tries to ground the injectors
and sets a code 16.


--
TeGGeR®

The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
www.tegger.com/hondafaq/

jim beam 03-15-2005 10:37 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
TeGGer® wrote:
> "Michael Pardee" <michaeltnull@cybertrails.com> wrote in
> news:IoCdnftUKZjr4arfRVn-tA@sedona.net:
>
>
>
>>The relay controls the fuel pump, and if the power to the pump is
>>intermittent it will cause the ECU to report problems with the fuel
>>injectors (sound familiar?) and the engine to run very badly.

>
>
>
>
> The injectors themselves receive their power from termianl 3 on the Main
> Relay. All the ECU does is ground them as needed, causing current to flow.
>
> If the solder is cracked and terminal 3 fails to provide power to the
> injectors, the ECU sees a no-voltage when it tries to ground the injectors
> and sets a code 16.


thank you sir! couldn't say it better myself.


jim beam 03-15-2005 10:37 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
TeGGer® wrote:
> "Michael Pardee" <michaeltnull@cybertrails.com> wrote in
> news:IoCdnftUKZjr4arfRVn-tA@sedona.net:
>
>
>
>>The relay controls the fuel pump, and if the power to the pump is
>>intermittent it will cause the ECU to report problems with the fuel
>>injectors (sound familiar?) and the engine to run very badly.

>
>
>
>
> The injectors themselves receive their power from termianl 3 on the Main
> Relay. All the ECU does is ground them as needed, causing current to flow.
>
> If the solder is cracked and terminal 3 fails to provide power to the
> injectors, the ECU sees a no-voltage when it tries to ground the injectors
> and sets a code 16.


thank you sir! couldn't say it better myself.


jim beam 03-15-2005 10:38 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
K-town wrote:
> <snip>
>
>>don't forget to resolder your main relay!

>
> </snip>
>
> Sorry, but my memory isn't the best. Why do I need to do this? Is there a
> way to check the main relay to see if it's good or bad before taking it
> apart and resoldering? Besides the fuel pump, what else does the main relay
> control? I know there is a slight problem with my main relay because
> sometimes when it's hot inside the car, it won't click when the check-engine
> light goes off, and of course, the car won't start. I have to squeeze the
> main relay and hold it to make it click so my car will fire up.
>
> Thanx again! :-)
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. The last 2 sentences have been going on for awhile, and may not be
> directly related to my current problem.


earlier, you mentioned the ecu giving code 16. that's almost always
main relay.


jim beam 03-15-2005 10:38 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
K-town wrote:
> <snip>
>
>>don't forget to resolder your main relay!

>
> </snip>
>
> Sorry, but my memory isn't the best. Why do I need to do this? Is there a
> way to check the main relay to see if it's good or bad before taking it
> apart and resoldering? Besides the fuel pump, what else does the main relay
> control? I know there is a slight problem with my main relay because
> sometimes when it's hot inside the car, it won't click when the check-engine
> light goes off, and of course, the car won't start. I have to squeeze the
> main relay and hold it to make it click so my car will fire up.
>
> Thanx again! :-)
>
> Jonathan
>
> P.S. The last 2 sentences have been going on for awhile, and may not be
> directly related to my current problem.


earlier, you mentioned the ecu giving code 16. that's almost always
main relay.


K-town 03-16-2005 12:13 PM

Re: What is the Problem - UPDATE
 
"jim beam" <nospam@example.net> wrote in message
news:1110944318.1597a9dbf17dddeaa0286530fea2785f@t eranews...
> K-town wrote:
>> <snip>
>>
>>>don't forget to resolder your main relay!

>>
>> </snip>
>>
>> Sorry, but my memory isn't the best. Why do I need to do this? Is there
>> a way to check the main relay to see if it's good or bad before taking it
>> apart and resoldering? Besides the fuel pump, what else does the main
>> relay control? I know there is a slight problem with my main relay
>> because sometimes when it's hot inside the car, it won't click when the
>> check-engine light goes off, and of course, the car won't start. I have
>> to squeeze the main relay and hold it to make it click so my car will
>> fire up.
>>
>> Thanx again! :-)
>>
>> Jonathan
>>
>> P.S. The last 2 sentences have been going on for awhile, and may not be
>> directly related to my current problem.

>
> earlier, you mentioned the ecu giving code 16. that's almost always main
> relay.


I've never taken a main relay apart before, so is it a no-brainer as to what
I will have to resolder? Is there a URL or some sort of reference guide I
can read that will tell me about the inner-workings of the main relay? I
just don't want to solder the wrong thing or screw it up some other way.

Thanx,

Jonathan




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