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Ive owned it now for two weeks and im already coping grief.

it has an inlet manifold leak, which is causing it to run lean, but here is the catch...

I think that it is over fueling, as it has backfired a few times under load (not even full throttle) and it died on the way to work this morning. it wouldnt fire up again, so i left it for about 5 minutes and it fired up again. But i virtually have to drive it like there is and egg between my foot and the throttle because when you try to accelerate it just pops and farts and carries on.

it has an apexi power fc computer, would it be this trying to compensate for the lean conditions?

any advice would be fantastic!

thanks in advance guys.

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I would say that if there is a leak, the pressure or boost from the turbo is released at the point of the leak. It may also be sucking air in, but the majority of the pressure build up would be lost at the point of the leak, causing the engine to receive less air than it normally would.

This results in the ECU thinking the engine has more air than it does, resulting in the over-fuelling.

great, i can see fun times are ahead.

the previous owner already changed the gasket not that long ago.

the car is also running without a cat, and tends to backfire a bit, could it be possible that when this has happened the backpressure has forced the manifold gasket apart?

a long shot i know, but when it backfired under load last night, i could have sworn i saw a bright orange flash from under the bonnet. the car hasent been the same since...

just a theory...

Inlet leaks will often give you an up and down idle as well. (ie on idle no boost NA so sucks air, on boost +ve pressure bleeds air performance down)

Grab a can of Aerostart and with car idling starting at the turbs spray each of the joints in the pipework moving towards your inlets. If the engine revs rise on spraying you have your leak (or one of them).

As for fixing the inlet leak, pulling off intake etc is a pita due to all the little pipes and shit under the plenum that you can't get to (unless you have little hand/arms and a few special tools) so almost always an engine out job.

If you are going that far have a think about checking/replacing your turbs and ..... and .... and .... bingo $10k later she's all good.

Its a tricky job working around the plenum, throttle bodies, inlet manifold with the engine in the car but by no means impossible. I have done it all about 4-5 times now and its pretty easy when you know what your doing and have the right tools. Pity im not im Melbourne anymore! I could do it for you guys at a good price :D

Basically you have 6 throttle body gaskets that can leak and one long inlet manifold gasket that can leak on that side of the engine. Give the aerostart a go as it will narrow down your area in which the problem is then you can save time and money.

You'll find the majority of them will break when you pull it apart anyway :cheers: If they have already been done and there is still a problem, more than likely its due to bad preparation before fitting the new gaskets last time. The surface MUST be spotless or else you will find that it will still leak. If you need anymore help doing the work, PM me and i can answer any other questions you might have :cheers:

Deren

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