Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 242
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

RBVS, nice choice of engine! Book it in at the local holden dealer for a service .....just to see the look on their faces!! .......... seriously though, try raising your idle speed using the idle air adjustment it worked for me.

My 32 stalls when the A/C is on @ idle. The compressor turns on and off, I also notice when my car idl'es with the a/c off the idle revs do fluctuate a little.

my r32 is completely stock with excetion from the exhaust and turbo timmer.

What does th IAC valve look like on a 32?

can u pull it apart, I pulled the AAC valve and the bit it connected 2, cleaned that allo out, but still has the same problem.

planning to look at the afm thus afternoon. Give that a clean ouot, any sugestion on cleaning the afm?

My 32 stalls when the A/C is on @ idle. The compressors turns on and off two, I also notice when my car idl'es with the a/c off the idle revs do fluctuate a little.

What does th IAC valve look like on a 32?

can u pull it apart, I pulled the AAC valve and the bit it connected 2, cleaned that allo out, but still has the same problem.  

planning to look at the afm thus afternoon. Give that a clean ouot, any sugestion on cleaning the afm?

The stalling at trailing throttle with warm motor on the rb25det is a common problem with the 2.5 litre square bore 6. There are many many reasons, and I have been plauged with it since day one.

I have a rb25 with a Haltech E6K and used to do it always unless i keep things fine tuned.

THere are several things you can try.

Obviously the earthing of the fuel pump will work, as it will keep the fuel pressure constant, and keep your fuel mixtures good at idle.

If you have aftermarket managment, try leaning off the mixtures around 10% at the 0 - 500rpm map. Leaning off helps keep the revs up. Leaning off too much will cause it to hunt tho, so it takes some fiddling to get right. Remember that you must do this tuning with the engine warm. NOT COLD. or you will have to reset the cold start map again.

ALso try opening the base idle screw a tad, raise the idle to 900 - 1100 rpm. All rb motors seem to like a high idle, guess this is why they are called a RB "racing block"

Some people even raise the advance at the 0 - 500rpm map to help keep the power and revs up in this area of the map.

typically, engines have a slightly rich mixture at idle to help keep the idle stable, and keep it from hunting.

another thing you can try is turn off decel cutoff. This turns off the fuel on deceleration, and sometimes doenst kick back in untill its too late, and the engine has stalled.

its all just a fine balance really between fuel, revs, and air, and you have to find that balance.

Also, if you have a BOV that leaks at idle, you can get this problem. Vacumn causing extra air to be sucked into the manifold throught the BOV can lean out the mixture too much and cause instability and stalling.

I used to raise the base idle screw just a tad (so it would idle at 800rpm) adjust the mixture so its ever so SLIGHTLY richer than sticiometric, raise the spark advance a little more than even at the 0 - 500 mark, and leave the decel cutoff feature disabled and it would have no problems.

Of course, you loose out on economy just a little bit, but there are some small sacrifices you simply have to make sometimes in order to get a very well behaved engine.

These engines even in stock form have a very high Volumetric effeciency, so when they are idling around 600-700 rpm, they are practicly idling in a vacumn. Show me anyone that has a modified rb25 that idles pefectly like a brand new stock one, and ill show you someone who can fine tune.

So is someone going to help out all those who are asking which wire is the ground wire for the fuel pump, or is everyone going to be ignorant and just turn a blind eye to those who havent an idea such as myself? I have had a look, and found a ground wire from the case of the fuel pump top, and i dont see how moving that to a new better earth would work, as it is securly attached to the top case from the factory..?

So is someone going to help out all those who are asking which wire is the ground wire for the fuel pump, or is everyone going to be ignorant and just turn a blind eye to those who havent an idea such as myself? I have had a look, and found a ground wire from the case of the fuel pump top, and i dont see how moving that to a new better earth would work, as it is securly attached to the top case from the factory..?

I considered this modification, and decided against it, therefore I can't tell you how to do it.

I would recommend adjusting the idle air by-pass before modifying the fuel wiring.

And take it easy man :cheers:

This thread is pretty old.

I also have the engine stalling problem b4, but now I putting a new 600hp intank surge fuel pump and a 1000hp external fuel with surge pump, it seems the problem gone. The mircotech also seems works much better than e-manage too

i got the idle speed controller changed today to rev more and now i dont stall i know the problem is not fixed but it wont stall anymore witch is what i need right now so i thought maybe some of you should give it a go only took about 5 minutes

Hi,

Yeah the HKS EIDS (electronic idle stabiliser) is used to help this problem. It electronically adjusts the rpm curve when the throttle is released. Ive got one inbuilt on the HKS boost controller that im about to install.

ps. check out the for sale section, as I have a stand alone unit for sale.

Will

I've also experimented with an HKS EIDS. It can be helpful in some situations, but isn't good enough in my opinion to adequately solve other underlying issues responsible for idle problems.

It intercepts and modifies the AFM signal to the ECU. It replaces the AFM signal when it drops suddenly, such as on throttle closure, and substitutes it with a constant voltage which is adjusted for magnitude and duration, as required to eliminate the stalling. It's one dimensional nature is the reason for its inadequacy in my opinion. Although I am particular about idle quality, others may find it acceptable.

  • 2 weeks later...

Probably a red herring, but my old '85 Corona use to do the same thing. Idle badly once the engine was warm, and cut out when you lift off the accelerator when changing down from 2nd to 1st. It was an intermittent fault too...you'd be driving around car with the car perfectly happy and then you stop at the lights and the damn thing just wouldn't hold it's revs.

Took it to the mechanic once, but they had no idea. I always thought it might've been the fault of the crap battery and the alternator slowly dying....but then again I'm not a mechanic...

  • 2 weeks later...

I had the same problem with my R33 S1, turned out to be a clogged fuel filter + the previous owner took it to a mechanic who obviously did not know what he was doing and had too small a hose fitted to the MAP sensor. Now runs sweet as!

Hey Ska,

The R33 has NO map sensor. The small hose comming from the plenum and plugging into a sensor is purely for the boost gauge on the dash. No input from it goes to the ECU. Your relatively lucky finding such a simple solution to your problem :D

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • There are adaptors that allow you to delete the booster and use an s15 clutch master cylinder.    if you want to keep the booster they are still available brand new 
    • I visited again today: It would appear they have painted the main body of the car and some parts of some of the panels, so I can say that I now have BMW parts in my car, much to the envy of @Dose Pipe Sutututu It is still covered in dust which is quite the tease but I did look at a few circumspect spots that will be behind bumpers and such and wiped some dust away: After my repeated begging to PLEASE DONT PAINT OVER THE ENGINEERING CERTIFICATE (you have to re-engineer the entire car if they do) I see THIS: Which is great. Excellent job tbh at least to me. A better non dusty example would be the backs of the doors that have been painted: Giving a reasonable contrast between old and new (I know the old isn't clear coated on the inside of doors). The door card will well and truly cover where the old paint is, you can see in the second pic some of the black butyl/whatever shit is sticking the plastic sheet behind the door transfer that has happened since it's clearly been stuck back on. The most maddening thing about this colour is every time I saw it in the wild it looks like another colour, same with photos of many cars with the same colour looking wildly different in every photo anybody ever takes and this is no exception. But stand a little further back and it suddenly looks dark AF. I did tell them when I was discussing which of the 70 million charcoal colours to choose from (a porsche one, a BMW one, or a R32 GTR one etc) that if they just ignored me and chose one at random I would probably never notice. Maybe they did. But the colour is supposed to be B39 (BMW Mineral Gray). Boring I know, but the R34 sedan (to me) really shows off it's boat-ness when you paint it in a bright colour like bayside blue or white or whatever else. I do have a fondness for AR2 Nissan Red, but decided against that because it'll have pretty odd contrast to random bits unpainted (like engine bay, bits of trim etc, and maybe it'll fade). And people will always fkin comment on AR2. Everything remains super dusty. I have tracking numbers for the new heads, as well as some Improved Racing goodies, but they probably will be a next year thing by the time they end up on the car. I did some maths on the heads and I know why nobody goes to this extent in Australia, because it's really not worth it, given I could have just CNC'ed my current heads, bought a FAST102/TB and used my current rocker/spring/cam combination and get a 383 stroker (or stroked a 6.0 GenIV bottom end to 6.6L) built for the same price of just the setup in the mail/on the floor here. Or I could have bought a LS3 and a Drysump system. And then have a complete engine to sell. Oh well
    • We just disconnected the vacuum line if I remember correctly, booster is still there. Is there a rebuild solution for the booster or a different adapter that will work for GTR chassis?
    • Yeah 4wd (boosted) has a recess in the firewall for the booster, and 2wd is flat - the example in the link shows the flat surface. When you deleted the booster, did you just attach the factory slave cylinder directly to the recess in the firewall with no adaption?  
    • Yes, but no. You need to keep the mating surfaces bare (ie the flat faces where the caliper and upright pads touch the dogbone) and also the internal threads will remain bare (unless there are no internal threads - do they use nuts on all the bolts?). So you can slow down obvious external corrosion, but not all of it. Anodising would be required to provide decent protection to the alloy, but I'm not actually sure if you should anodise something that is all about the strength. Anodising does reduce strength significantly. Like, up to 50% on some alloys for high thickness coating.
×
×
  • Create New...