Sputtering from Vacuum leak?
#1
Sputtering from Vacuum leak?
'99 Triton 5.4 After my first (attempted) fix of the infamous rotted rubber elbow leading to the intake manifold (common source of vacuum leak) the car ran great for a couple of months. It appears that this 'fix' (using 3/4" heater hose with a 5/8" elbow stuffed inside) has failed, as the original symptoms have returned. Would love to find the proper elbow to fit the 3/4" nipple on the back of the intake manifold, but it seems that only the 5/8" size is available.
1. Do any of you know of a source for the proper 3/4" 90 included on the PCV hose assembly?
2. Any suggestions regarding how to troubleshoot the vacuum lines to weed out other possible leaks? i.e. are there techniques like temporarily plugging some of the ports or something to see how it changes the symptoms?
3. A tiny yellow hard plastic vacuum hose was found to be broken, Although I thought I'd repaired it (see a trend here?), could this potentially be the cause of the sputtering?
1. Do any of you know of a source for the proper 3/4" 90 included on the PCV hose assembly?
2. Any suggestions regarding how to troubleshoot the vacuum lines to weed out other possible leaks? i.e. are there techniques like temporarily plugging some of the ports or something to see how it changes the symptoms?
3. A tiny yellow hard plastic vacuum hose was found to be broken, Although I thought I'd repaired it (see a trend here?), could this potentially be the cause of the sputtering?
#2
My wife has no car. If I don't get this figured out in a day or two, my wife is going to:
1. Kill Me, or
2. Buy a new Lexus on credit
Not sure which is worse. If you guys have any ideas, sure would appreciate your expertise.
1. Kill Me, or
2. Buy a new Lexus on credit
Not sure which is worse. If you guys have any ideas, sure would appreciate your expertise.
#7
Senior Member
I did a search on Google, and found one video on a "smoke" test. They close off the air intake, and connect a hose into the IAC line. There could be a leak where the PCV valve meets the valve cover, or worse, on the intake manifold. Mine doesn't sputter, but it does idle 4-500 RPM higher, and my 4.6 just threw a check engine light (I'm getting a code reader, but I'll bet it's P071 - lean mix - due to excess air). Poke around Google for vacuum leak, and there's plenty of shadetree mechanics that posted videos.
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#9
OK guys, I must be doing something wrong. Got no change in idle from carb cleaner. I actually introduced a leak to see if idle changed when carb cleaner applied.... no change. I'm probably just doing it incorrectly. Any suggestions?
The carb cleaner I'm using is Next Dimension Carb Spray. It contains Toluene, Methanol and Methylene Chloride. Looks like nasty stuff.
The carb cleaner I'm using is Next Dimension Carb Spray. It contains Toluene, Methanol and Methylene Chloride. Looks like nasty stuff.
#10
Senior Member
I'm following the steps on the following link:
http://www.2carpros.com/articles/engine-idles-too-high
My next step is to remove and clean the IAC valve, with throttle body cleaner. Kevin, your stuff sounds like it'd strip paint off metal! Too strong for the IAC valve. Disconnect the electrical connector from the IAC valve, and see if there's any difference in RPM. I only noticed a 50 RPM drop when I did this.
http://www.2carpros.com/articles/engine-idles-too-high
My next step is to remove and clean the IAC valve, with throttle body cleaner. Kevin, your stuff sounds like it'd strip paint off metal! Too strong for the IAC valve. Disconnect the electrical connector from the IAC valve, and see if there's any difference in RPM. I only noticed a 50 RPM drop when I did this.