View Full Version : Couple issues, can someone look at my log?
thunderstruck507
July 27th, 2010, 01:14 PM
My car has decided to randomly start dying every so often. It only does it from idle and often during braking or turning, especially on inclines.
It doesn't seem to stutter out so much as just die like I reached up and turned the key.
Also during cruise when I let off the rpms hang then fall then rise, during this the timing is going from normal to 2* then back to normal. In my timing tables I'm not seeing any strange blocks that would explain the drop.
Any ideas?
joecar
July 27th, 2010, 03:54 PM
Any DTC's...?
Can use your V2 to pull DTC's... (if you setup the DTC's in the S&T black box configuration "Tune Settings" tab, V2 will say in English what the DTC means)
joecar
July 27th, 2010, 04:00 PM
I can't see reason... check/clean power and ground connections for voltage drop (there should be less than 0.2V drop)...
Do you have all the grounds listed in the PCM connector pinouts...?
Do you have the head/block ground connections...?
joecar
July 27th, 2010, 04:04 PM
Unrelated comments:
PCM is seeing the TCC slipping... have to do something about this, increase the min TCC pressure/PWM to 80+%, see table D2903.
I see IAT responding to ECT increase (IAT seems to lag about 30 seconds behind ECT)... you might have to relocate intake duct to get more direct cold air.
thunderstruck507
July 28th, 2010, 12:21 AM
The grounds on the head and to the battery are good. I'm going to run an extra ground to the fuse block since its just grounding through the fuse block mounting screw now. I'm going to try to borrow a jack to check starter wires and look below for any obvious issues.
The car has a 3600 stall, what will adjusting the table you mentioned do? Just set so the pcm only sees slip when it crosses a higher threshold?
The intake ducting is the best I can do right now until I can find or make a tube with a dimple to cross the radiator hose so the intake can draw air from the driver side behind the headlight. Right now there's no choice but this:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v477/thunderstruck507/ls1019.jpg
What about the timing issue on deceleration? Any ideas what could be causing it to pull all but 2* and then toss it all back in? I might need to call my tuner about that one. Problem is he is 4 hours away otherwise I would just take it back to him.
thunderstruck507
July 28th, 2010, 12:25 AM
The IAT is in the filter rubber right where it meets the MAF. If I turn on the cooling fan on that side of the engine the temps drop by 20* which helps some. I still want to make a better cold air system somehow.
No DTCs now, last week it tossed a code once for the TCC brake switch (which might be on the same circuit as other sensors? maf maybe?) but after I cleared it, it never came back so far.
Sometimes the car does struggle a moment to find clean idle at stops, with rpms dipping to 500rpm and lower but it catches quickly.
Should I crack the throttle blade and reset the tps/ idle relearn or raise commanded idle? It is set to 850rpm and timing jumps around a lot there.
Also is the PID for oil pressure invalid for my application or something? I noticed it is hung on one low voltage value and never fluctuated. I've never scanned its output before.
joecar
July 28th, 2010, 03:04 AM
...
The car has a 3600 stall, what will adjusting the table you mentioned do? Just set so the pcm only sees slip when it crosses a higher threshold?
...Does your stall have a TCC lockup clutch...? If it does, then the lockup is slipping. (It looks like it has a lockup clutch.)
[ TCC = torque converter clutch = lockup clutch ]
Add TCCMODE and TCCDC when you next log... when TCCMODE says Locked, then TCCSLIP should go to pretty much zero.
[ keep the pid channel count no larger than 24 for fastest sample rate, I want to see any transitions ]
When you open the throttle the TCC apply/release tables will unlock the TCC allowing your stall to do it's job;
when you go back to cruising, the TCC apply/release tables will lock the TCC allowing better fuel mileage and keeping fluid temp down.
If you look at TCCDC when TCCMODE is Locked, you will see that it is below 80%, allowing the TCC to slip during cruising.
Slipping means the TCC is dragging/slipping, which wears out the clutch friction surface and raises the fluid temp.
joecar
July 28th, 2010, 03:20 AM
...
What about the timing issue on deceleration? Any ideas what could be causing it to pull all but 2* and then toss it all back in? I might need to call my tuner about that one. Problem is he is 4 hours away otherwise I would just take it back to him.To see why timing is being pulled, log the pid whose names look like EST_xxx_DMA... these may give a hint to where timing is going.
[ EST = electronic spark timing ]
[ DMA = direct memory access... (not a GM provided pid, but EFILive knows where to look for this in the PCM's memory ]
joecar
July 28th, 2010, 03:22 AM
...
The intake ducting is the best I can do right now until I can find or make a tube with a dimple to cross the radiator hose so the intake can draw air from the driver side behind the headlight. Right now there's no choice but this:
...Ah, I see.
Very nice and clean engine bay, big and roomy... nice car :cheers:
thunderstruck507
July 28th, 2010, 03:55 AM
I will check on that then, doesn't sound good...doesnt seem to slip at cruise though.
I will also try to log the timing.
What about the oil pressure? bad sensor maybe?
joecar
July 28th, 2010, 05:49 AM
I will check on that then, doesn't sound good...doesnt seem to slip at cruise though.
...It's not a hard slip, you won't necessarily notice it by SOTP.
joecar
July 28th, 2010, 07:51 AM
...
Also is the PID for oil pressure invalid for my application or something? I noticed it is hung on one low voltage value and never fluctuated. I've never scanned its output before.
Is your engine oil pressure sensor wired to the PCM...?
Y-car had the EOPS wired to the PCM, and F-car did not, see attached.
thunderstruck507
July 28th, 2010, 08:29 AM
my pcm and harness is from a fbody so I guess not
Now I feel incredibly stupid for buying a $70 sensor because the one on my engine was broke when I got it
joecar
July 28th, 2010, 12:14 PM
You can try adding those pins to the PCM connector, and wire them to your pressure sensor, see if it works.
thunderstruck507
July 30th, 2010, 11:38 AM
here is a quick log of timing PIDs, I'll also get a TCC one later when I'm on a road allowing high enough speed for lock up.
joecar
July 31st, 2010, 09:23 AM
YEs, those are the pids...
That log doesn't show timing being pulled down to 2° as you described in post #1...
Add SPARKADV, VSS, DYNCYLAIR, ECT, IAT (that should bring your pid channel count to 48 which is ok for this test) and try to duplicate the condition.
thunderstruck507
August 1st, 2010, 03:31 AM
I might not have been going fast enough since that was in town, it seems most common letting off from 50+ in 4th, or lower speeds if I manually hold it in 3rd
Another clue, today after it died upon restart I got 2 quick pops in the exhaust on passengers side...this should be an indication I'm losing spark and that's what's killing the car correct?
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