Hi. My son recently replaced his intake manifold on his 1997 Altima and
now it will barely idle, and a vacuum gauge oscillates like a madman.
After checking all the vacuum hoses for routing and leaks, I listened
to the base of each injector with a long rubber hose. I could hear what
sounded like a definite hiss on several, so we bought new gaskets that
go between the bottom of the injector and the manifold. It didn't seem
to help much, so I tried putting a heavy coat of rubber cement around
the base of each injector where it goes into the manifold. That
smoothed out the idle. Once the rubber cement is peeled off, it reverts
back to running like a piece of crap.
The fuel rail seems to offer some movement when you tighten the two
bolts down, but just looking down at the injector seat, they don't look
properly seated to me.
Is there some way to make sure we are getting these seals seated
properly when we tighten the two bolts down? Is there a torque setting
for tightening the bolts?
Is there some sort of gasket sealer we should be using? Should we
polish the seat on the top of the manifold?
Overall, it seems like a pretty hit or miss design.
> Hi. My son recently replaced his intake manifold on his 1997 Altima and
> now it will barely idle, and a vacuum gauge oscillates like a madman.
[quoted text clipped - 19 lines]
>
> Overall, it seems like a pretty hit or miss design.
Here is the follow up, in case anyone else has this problem. It turns
out that the fuel injector rail was tightened down without the two
spacers that go between it and the manifold, causing it to bend just
enough so that the injectors would not seal. We got a new rail from the
local you-pull-it and put it on, and all is well again. The rubber
cement temporary sealer is worth remembering, and peels off easily when
you are done testing.
kegler@bowling.net - 07 Jun 2006 00:28 GMT
You could hear a pin drop when the almighty "Smyrna45"
<smyrna5@yahoo.com> addressed his adoring fans with these immortal
words:
>> Hi. My son recently replaced his intake manifold on his 1997 Altima and
>> now it will barely idle, and a vacuum gauge oscillates like a madman.
[quoted text clipped - 27 lines]
>cement temporary sealer is worth remembering, and peels off easily when
>you are done testing.
interesting...thanks for following up. lesson learned.
Codifus - 12 Jun 2006 02:49 GMT
>>Hi. My son recently replaced his intake manifold on his 1997 Altima and
>>now it will barely idle, and a vacuum gauge oscillates like a madman.
[quoted text clipped - 27 lines]
> cement temporary sealer is worth remembering, and peels off easily when
> you are done testing.
I was listening. Thanks for the heads up.
CD