We have a 2000 honda odyssey with 100k+ miles on it that has a
worsening conditioning trying to start and drive it in the morning.
This was a minor annoyance this summer and fall, but now that winter
has arrived, its gotten worse. Heres the deal:
In the morning I start the van up, it starts for a moment, then stalls
out. It will not start after this, it cranks, but never turns over.
Not until I open the gas lid and unscrew the gas cap for about 5-10
minutes. Then, I put it back on, and try starting it again. Now it
will start, but there a lot of dashboard lights on(engine, brake,
traction control, etc.). If you try and drive it, it will go only
about 10-20 mph like it has no power. You can floor the gas pedal and
get nothing. From here just shut it off, and wait another 10-20
minutes. Now it will start, and everything is fine! no lights, no
problems, you're good to go for the day. You can drive it work, and
that night it still starts fine. The next morning the problem starts
all over again.
We have taken it to three area mechanics and none have been able to
diagnose the problem yet. So far in our troubleshooting we know theres
a link with the cold weather. If its stays in a garage overnight it
seems to start ok in the morning. and there wasn't much problem this
summer. This winter its much worse however. Also, there seems to be
something with the gas cap/tank as well. One mechnic said he found a
faulty code to the gas cap, so we got a new one, but it hasn't helped.
Taking the gas cap off though seems to have some interaction with
starting it anyway. We've tried dry gas, with no change, and had all
the filters possible changed with no improvement.
I am hoping there is some Honda guru who can point me in the right
direction where to take this problem. Before this problem the Odyssey
has had a history with Transmission trouble, and we were never
satisfied with the repairs attempted by the honda dealer(it still
doesn't shift right(hard downshifts) in normal driving, and seems to
bolt in gear from a stop sometimes), and also had the timing belt
replaced which was reccomended given the mileage. Other than that its
been relatively trouble free before the starting problems.
any help is appreciated....
jim beam - 04 Jan 2007 05:16 GMT
> We have a 2000 honda odyssey with 100k+ miles on it that has a
> worsening conditioning trying to start and drive it in the morning.
[quoted text clipped - 35 lines]
>
> any help is appreciated....
check the plug coils, plugs, etc. and run injector cleaner through it
for a couple of tanks. leaky injectors dump gas into the manifold and
give problems like you describe.
motsco_ - 04 Jan 2007 05:51 GMT
> We have a 2000 honda odyssey with 100k+ miles on it that has a
> worsening conditioning trying to start and drive it in the morning.
[quoted text clipped - 35 lines]
>
> any help is appreciated....
================================================
I'm with Jim . . . Read what your Owner's Manual says about how to start
a flooded Honda. You probably have a dribbling injector that's flooding
it overnight. Injector cleaner three times a year will probably solve it.
'Curly'
John Horner - 04 Jan 2007 07:48 GMT
> We have taken it to three area mechanics and none have been able to
> diagnose the problem yet.
Are these mechanics Honda specialists? With this kind of strange-ish
problem you want someone who works on your kind of car all the time.
They are much more likely to have been there and done that.
Woody - 04 Jan 2007 16:57 GMT
Odyssey's of that generation have transmission problems. Talk to your
dealer. I agree with checking the injectors for flooding. Also review some
of the posts at www.ODYCLUB.com . Practically every Ody problem has been
discussed there by the 40,000 participants.
> We have a 2000 honda odyssey with 100k+ miles on it that has a
> worsening conditioning trying to start and drive it in the morning.
[quoted text clipped - 35 lines]
>
> any help is appreciated....
mrsure - 08 Jan 2007 14:20 GMT
Thanks everyone, I bought some injector cleaner and will give it go.
It started well this weekend, but it was super warm here for January,
so I have to wait for some colder weather to test. I will let you know
how it turns out.....
> We have a 2000 honda odyssey with 100k+ miles on it that has a
> worsening conditioning trying to start and drive it in the morning.
[quoted text clipped - 35 lines]
>
> any help is appreciated....
mrsure - 19 Jan 2007 15:07 GMT
Ok after a couple of cans of fuel injector cleaner heres whats
happening:
It still won't start in cold weather. When you first start it, it
catches, but will die right away unless you keep your foot on the gas
pedal-half way pressed as the manual states. What I have been doing is
keeping the pedal pressed so that the engine continually revs at about
2000 RPM's, and in about 5-10 minutes, when the engine warms up as
noted on the temp gauge, I let it go, and the van is ok to go. If you
let go any time before its warmed up, its gonna die, and be difficult
to start again.
I also noted that once warmed up, idle is at about 500-700 rpm which
feels a bit low to me. Even after warm up, if you rev the engine in
park, it will sometimes stall after you let go when the rpm goes down
to near zero. It seems to have a problem idling steady. So I am
wondering if you guys still think the problem lies in the fuel
injection, or something else like engine tuning, etc?
motsco_ - 19 Jan 2007 15:34 GMT
> Ok after a couple of cans of fuel injector cleaner heres whats
> happening:
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
> wondering if you guys still think the problem lies in the fuel
> injection, or something else like engine tuning, etc?
=====================================
When it's cold out, it should start with a high idle, and you should
wait a few seconds and drive away. Lets hope somebody else here has some
good ideas. Did you sign in and SEARCH at www.Odyclub.com ? There's some
good answers there too.
'Curly'
jim beam - 19 Jan 2007 15:42 GMT
> Ok after a couple of cans of fuel injector cleaner heres whats
> happening:
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
> wondering if you guys still think the problem lies in the fuel
> injection, or something else like engine tuning, etc?
some general suggestions:
1. make sure the valve lash is set right.
2. make sure the idle is set right - per factory procedure.
3. make sure the grade of motor oil is correct - you may not think this
relevant, but oil gets more viscous when cold. if the grade is
incorrect to start with, it can be too viscous when cold and choke the
motor. try it with a lawn mower some time if you want to prove it.
4. make sure all the ignition componentry is new and in top condition.
aged plugs don't fire as efficiently and weak spark won't yield complete
combustion.