We haven't figured out what is going on with this Tbird, so thought
about putting the symptoms before this panel. Maybe you can come up
with something I can take to my garage.
CAR: 94 Tbird, V6, auto, about 115,xxx miles.
Symptoms: When driving at any speed, you hold enough gas pedal on it
to maintain that speed, whether it's 40, 50, 60. What happens with
this car, it will start to "sputter" like it's not getting enough
fuel, and will begin to 'buck', or get a case of the hiccups. I would
let off the gas, let it roll a bit, and gas it again. It might smooth
out, and it might not. When this first started, the CHECK ENGINE
light would come on for about a minute and go off. After several days
of driving it like this (while waiting to get the money for the
repairs), I learned how to baby the gas pedal and keep the CE light
from coming on. Many times I had to give it enough gas for it to drop
out of overdrive and increase the RPMs. Using the cruise control will
not stop this from happening.
Now, about the time this started, on a short trip out of town, when I
started up a hill and the car was under a load, the airflow would
switch from the dash vents to the defroster vents. I was told this is
a default, and the car was "losing vacuum" some place and causing
this.
This past Tuesday, I dropped it off at the garage. The mechanic said
later there were no codes stored in the computer. They did track the
stuttering problem to the ignition system, and suggested the following
repair: Replace plugs, plug wires, distributor cap and rotor and
adjust the timing. They also did an oil change and replaced the oil-
air-fuel filters.
I picked the car up Wednesday afternoon, paid the bill, and headed
home. For the first three or four miles, the car ran great! YAY!
It's fixed!
I came to an intersection, stopped at the red light, and turned left
when the light changed. The engine suddenly reverted back to its
former condition, furnishing just enough power to get it rolling and
shift into second. By this time, I had the gas pedal about 1/4 of the
way down, the RPMs probably weren't over 1500, and I was going maybe
20-25 mph. I covered a half block, and pressed harder on the gas
pedal, before it started running like it should. The rest of the way
home, about 10 miles, I had to baby the gas pedal all the way. Never
got a CE light, however.
Thursday, I has lots to do here at home, so the car didn't get
driven. Today tho, I did take it out for a test drive... If you want
to call it that! It is now running WORSE than when I took it to the
garage! I found a smooth road and got it up to the 40 mph limit. At
40, the tach was reading about 1200 rpm in fourth. I started pressing
the gas down, the rpms went up to 1500, but the speed increased only
minimally. I fed more pedal to it and the rpms stayed right about
1500, but my speed did increase. By the time it took off like it
should be running, I had the gas pedal AT LEAST 1/2 way to the floor!
I went back home and called the mechanic and scheduled a visit for
next week...
Another way to describe this is: Remember when engines had carbs on
them, and sometimes you would get a "flat spot", and the car wouldn't
take off like it should...? That's a pretty good explanation.
Any ideas, thoughts, suggestions, whatevers, would be greatly
appreciated. Please don't tell me to get rid of it, as I am already
looking for a replacement. Meanwhile, I need to keep this running
until I find something.
Thanks a lots, guys! I've been in here 3-4 years ago, and the info I
got was spot-on!
Byeee!
Gerri
D. Stussy - 25 Jul 2009 06:11 GMT
> We haven't figured out what is going on with this Tbird, so ...
Maybe this: Fuel line filter. Particles large enough to block the filter,
but when taking a foot off the accelerator, flow relaxes, and the particles
wash back into the feed line, only to block again when flow increases.
Nicole - 26 Jul 2009 15:47 GMT
> > We haven't figured out what is going on with this Tbird, so ...
>
> Maybe this: Fuel line filter. Particles large enough to block the filter,
> but when taking a foot off the accelerator, flow relaxes, and the particles
> wash back into the feed line, only to block again when flow increases.
When they put the new plugs & plug wires in, they also changed the
oil, air and fuel filters.
Gerri
D. Stussy - 26 Jul 2009 21:16 GMT
On Jul 25, 1:11 am, "D. Stussy" <s...@bde-arc.ampr.org> wrote:
> "Gerri" <GerDa...@aol.com> wrote in message
>
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
> but when taking a foot off the accelerator, flow relaxes, and the particles
> wash back into the feed line, only to block again when flow increases.
When they put the new plugs & plug wires in, they also changed the
oil, air and fuel filters.
-----
But did they LOOK at the fuel filter that was changed out? The crap could
still be in the fuel line or gas tank.
Puddin' Man - 26 Jul 2009 20:25 GMT
The primary culprit I'm aware of is plug wires. Verify that they did
indeed replace them (properly).
Look for broken and/or disconnected (i.e. vacuum) hoses.
I suppose it's possible that the Mass Air Flow sensor is contaminated.
If so, it can likely be cleaned.
P
>We haven't figured out what is going on with this Tbird, so thought
>about putting the symptoms before this panel. Maybe you can come up
[quoted text clipped - 70 lines]
>
>Gerri
"Law Without Equity Is No Law At All. It Is A Form Of Jungle Rule."
Steve Stone - 27 Jul 2009 03:16 GMT
> The primary culprit I'm aware of is plug wires. Verify that they did
> indeed replace them (properly).
Does your car have the TFI (thin film ignition) module bolted to the
distributor?
That was a chronic point of failure for many Ford V6 engines using the
EEC-IV computers.