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2.0 FSI Poor idle when cold
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Originally posted by saabman View Poststored and used as the start up value but is not right for the condition of the engine at that time
Originally posted by saabman View PostApparently clearing engine fault codes resets the fuel trim values - I wonder if clearing the codes prior to a cold start makes a difference?
Originally posted by saabman View PostUnfortunatley I cant try this out as my daughter lives 200km away so I can only work on the data I have
Originally posted by JustCruisn View PostSo is this saying the O2 heaters are not working ?2016 GTI 40 Years | 2012 Up! | 2006 Jetta - Sold
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Made a few plots related to the Lambda values today. This was from a cold start and I drove it until it came up to temperature on the dash - however nothing much interesting happens after 5 mins so I truncated the data there. The vertical red line represents when the rough idle period ends. Plot is available here (recommend downloading and viewing on your computer as Google Drive viewer isn't the best).2016 GTI 40 Years | 2012 Up! | 2006 Jetta - Sold
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That looks great.
A picture certainly tells a thousand words ...
The readings from Bank 1 seem to be all over the shop while bank 2 is reasonably consistent . On mine its bank 2 that is all over the place and 1 is more constant. is it the sensor or is it something else
I come across this tonight which might help.
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That link looks excellent.
A couple of observations I made:
1) The high idle lasted for longer on this start than previously. Normally it lasts 30-40 seconds, yesterday night it was 75 seconds. The car had been sitting for 48 hours at that point.
2) Bank 1 Sensor 1 not only displays erratic behaviour much sooner than the others - it also seems to oscillate around 1.5 V rather than 0.5V. Is it dodgy or is the label file wrong and this is some other sensor?
3) Sometimes there is a terrible rattle during the high idle - could it be related? Sticking lifter? Cam chain rattle?
Based on the abnormal start (extended high idle) I will reproduce the graphs today and see if that changes anything. Normally the misfires do not occur immediately but start to happen about 10 seconds in. I want to see if there is any correlation there. Additionally from that link it appears as though the Lambda Control % should not exceed +/- 4% during idle. Bank 2 sensor 1 seems to stay within this limit however bank 1 sensor 1 clearly exceeds it.2016 GTI 40 Years | 2012 Up! | 2006 Jetta - Sold
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Made some more graphs today. Decided to swap out MB 043 for MB 014 since nothing much was happening on 43 and 14 has the misfire counter. Added a green line to signify when the first misfire is detected (could be misfiring before this but misfire detection seems to be off then). Still the voltage on B1S1 is definitely the most odd thing that's jumping out at me. Also made a plot of a normal 'hot' start, but did not let it idle before setting off so keep that in mind when viewing. Was going to plot them on top of each other but it just made it harder to decipher due to the oscillating nature of the data.
Cold start
Hot start2016 GTI 40 Years | 2012 Up! | 2006 Jetta - Sold
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Just looking at your readings are almost identical to mine - the engine load is a good one makes it look like your developing 70 odd KW just to idle but its just because the manifold vacuum is so low. As I understand it, the manifold vacuum is low because the timing is so far retarded youll see its about 25deg ATDC. I have taken the misfires as a result of such late ignition timing, a symptom rather than a cause.
The rattle might be a clue but then it might be just a result of the misfires?
How accesible are the sensors - I wonder if its easy enough to switch them over and see if the erratic voltage changes banks. if it changes then the sensor is the cause if it doesnt then there is something else.
I think the label file is good enough. I think the errtaic readings are real - I dont have logs for the voltage from my sensors but the lambda values are definantly diferent between the two.
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Originally posted by MEL744 View Post
Maybe, but they might be working fine, I'm not entirely sure how quickly they should heat up. You also seem to have the 2.0 FSI, do you have this rough start condition?
After about 30 seconds the idle drops off & the engine runs silky smooth.MK4 GTI - Sold
MK5 Jetta Turbo - Sold
MK5 Jetta 2.Slow - Until it dies.
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Originally posted by JustCruisn View PostYep I have the same. Can be rough idle, engine kind of surges or feels unbalanced. Reversing out of driveway required a lot of brake effort to keep it from racing off.
After about 30 seconds the idle drops off & the engine runs silky smooth.
I was having a look around today in the engine bay and at some stuff online. Looks like the pre-cat sensor sits on top of the manifold and is easy to access (maybe need to remove some EGR piping to get it out). Naturally the post-cat sensor is going to be under the car but from some tutorials (on GTIs) it looks easy to remove once you lift the car. Haven't got the time at the moment to swap them over, hopefully I will be able to try it in the next few weeks.2016 GTI 40 Years | 2012 Up! | 2006 Jetta - Sold
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Yeah my bad, I have a BVY with 4 sensors. I can't see any others except this one so far from a quick check. From that site you linked earlier the GTI does in fact have 2 sensors only - why the 2.0 FSI needs 4 baffles me.
EDIT: Went back and did some more research
Only one is visible from above (the one I photographed) - this is Bank 1 Sensor 1 (Lambda Probe G39)
The other 3 sensors are all after the cat according to the workshop manual site
Exhaust manifold with B1S1
The rest of the exhaust system with 3 sensorsLast edited by MEL744; 13-05-2019, 09:17 PM.2016 GTI 40 Years | 2012 Up! | 2006 Jetta - Sold
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Yes I looked into it as we’ll I have BLX engine and it also has 4 sensors but 2 in the manifold and 1 after the cat and think the other one is after the NOX cat (to be confirmed)
I assumed (incorrectly) the BVY also had 2 in the manifold.
So my idea of swapping the sensors in the manifold won’t work for you.
They don’t make it easy.
My current thinking is along the lines of, you have 4 sensors all in a line the readings should be all be at least very similar. if there is a discrepancy the issue is either between two sensors eg leaking exhaust, damaged cat. Or one of the sensors is faulty. ( does the BVY have air injection? The BLX doesn’t)
This is really a good exercise in getting to know the ins and outs of our engines and the subtle differences between them.
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