I have a 91 GL (fuel injected, manual trans) that just recently developed a problem. Several weeks ago I got caught in a downpour for several hours and had no problem with the car at all. Last week the same thing happened (downpour) and it felt like I dropped down to running on three cylinders... loss of power and the exhaust note changed. I kept driving (was on the interstate) and after a while it felt like it dropped down to running on two cylinders and I could barely make it up slight hills at 45 mph.
It would occasionally pick back up to 3 cylinders and sometimes would run normally (all four). Seems like it got worse when the rain really started coming down hard or I was right behind someone who was throwing up a lot of spray/mist. Once the rain slacked off and/or I managed not to be behind anyone the problem improved... if the rain picked back up the problem got worse.
I stopped and checked the engine. With it missing (while idling) I checked and appeared to have spark on all plug wires. Distributor cap, wires, and spark plugs looked dry. The connector on the air flow meter was slightly ajar and I thought I'd found the problem. Someone had put the metal retaining wire on the wrong way and it wasn't locking the connector onto the air flow meter properly. I fixed that (and noted there was no moisture in the connector and reconnected it... but it didn't change the problem. The weather improved and I was able to limp home on 2, 3, and sometimes all four cylinders.
I've since driven the car in the dry several times and it has run perfectly.
I'm looking for advice on what to check for next time this happens. I found a previous thread here mentioning the throttle position sensor, so I will put that on my list.
What else could cause loss of fuel or spark to only one or two cylinders at a time? Looking at the wiring diagram, it looks like the injectors are batch fired (1 & 3 together and 2 & 4 together), so I would lose two cylinders at a time if there was a wiring problem there (also, the injectors were dry). I assume if I had a coil problem it would affect the entire engine rather than a few cylinders.
Any ideas would be appreciated.
Thanks
It would occasionally pick back up to 3 cylinders and sometimes would run normally (all four). Seems like it got worse when the rain really started coming down hard or I was right behind someone who was throwing up a lot of spray/mist. Once the rain slacked off and/or I managed not to be behind anyone the problem improved... if the rain picked back up the problem got worse.
I stopped and checked the engine. With it missing (while idling) I checked and appeared to have spark on all plug wires. Distributor cap, wires, and spark plugs looked dry. The connector on the air flow meter was slightly ajar and I thought I'd found the problem. Someone had put the metal retaining wire on the wrong way and it wasn't locking the connector onto the air flow meter properly. I fixed that (and noted there was no moisture in the connector and reconnected it... but it didn't change the problem. The weather improved and I was able to limp home on 2, 3, and sometimes all four cylinders.
I've since driven the car in the dry several times and it has run perfectly.
I'm looking for advice on what to check for next time this happens. I found a previous thread here mentioning the throttle position sensor, so I will put that on my list.
What else could cause loss of fuel or spark to only one or two cylinders at a time? Looking at the wiring diagram, it looks like the injectors are batch fired (1 & 3 together and 2 & 4 together), so I would lose two cylinders at a time if there was a wiring problem there (also, the injectors were dry). I assume if I had a coil problem it would affect the entire engine rather than a few cylinders.
Any ideas would be appreciated.
Thanks
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