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Vacuum fluctuation at idle.
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Topic: Vacuum fluctuation at idle. (Read 3128 times)
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Jordan_J
Bone Stock
Posts: 64
PSI: 0
Vacuum fluctuation at idle.
«
on:
April 14 2011, 04:49:10 PM »
It moved up and down a couple of pounds really once the car has warmed up but until then it runs fine. Also when I let of the gas and am just rolling it does it. What could cause this?
Cam?
Head gasket?
Vacuum leak?
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87 Turbo T - 4.1 484 block bored .030 over, Champion ported irons with ported intake, RJC power plate, Elgin 214/224 cam, 6776 turbo with RJC boost controller, stretched SLIC, 3\" THDP, Pypes dual exhaust, 4\" MAF pipe with 14\" K&N and Z06 MAF, 60# Mototrons, hot wired Walbro 340 with KB-BAP, Translator Gen 2 and Extender Extreme chip, Mike Kurtz built 200-4r, PPC 3200 stall, UMI upper and lower control arms, passenger side airbag, any hydroboosted.
20# Boost at 20* timing on 93 octane. No track times yet.
Alky install in progress.
Steve Wood
Turbo Street Outlaw
Posts: 9950
PSI: 34
Vacuum fluctuation at idle.
«
Reply #1 on:
April 14 2011, 05:31:33 PM »
Inches of mercury
It should read fairly steadily at idle, cruise or any steady throttle position as long as there is no load change.
Typical might be 15" at cold start up increasing to maybe 17" as it warms up...all at idle.
going down the road at 70 mph, it maybe 12" and drop to 6-8 going up a hill.
If you step on the gas, it may go to zero, or onward into boost.
If it is jumping around at idle without the gas being touched, then it could be a leak, bad valve, poorly damped gauge, or something else.
My numbers are ball park guesses as the engine combination, altitude, engine condition, etc. can all affect the vacuum being pulled.
Most gauges probably don't move much more than an inch on a healthy engine if a quality gauge is used...that is my experience, anyway
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Steve Wood
http://www.vortexbuicks-etc.com
A lot of broken parts does not make you a racer; it makes you a slow learner.
Jordan_J
Bone Stock
Posts: 64
PSI: 0
Vacuum fluctuation at idle.
«
Reply #2 on:
April 14 2011, 09:13:47 PM »
Awesome thanks for the info Steve!
Would there be any other key symptoms to a bad valve?
One thing I noticed is the RPM occasionally will jump up and down like 200 rpm which leads me to think it's a vacuum leak somewhere.
Logged
87 Turbo T - 4.1 484 block bored .030 over, Champion ported irons with ported intake, RJC power plate, Elgin 214/224 cam, 6776 turbo with RJC boost controller, stretched SLIC, 3\" THDP, Pypes dual exhaust, 4\" MAF pipe with 14\" K&N and Z06 MAF, 60# Mototrons, hot wired Walbro 340 with KB-BAP, Translator Gen 2 and Extender Extreme chip, Mike Kurtz built 200-4r, PPC 3200 stall, UMI upper and lower control arms, passenger side airbag, any hydroboosted.
20# Boost at 20* timing on 93 octane. No track times yet.
Alky install in progress.
Steve Wood
Turbo Street Outlaw
Posts: 9950
PSI: 34
Vacuum fluctuation at idle.
«
Reply #3 on:
April 14 2011, 10:39:49 PM »
you can do a compression check to see if you have a leaky valve...someti
mes if it is an exhaust valve, you can hear/feel it in the exhaust
Logged
Steve Wood
http://www.vortexbuicks-etc.com
A lot of broken parts does not make you a racer; it makes you a slow learner.
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Vacuum fluctuation at idle.
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