tonyb0902
New member
HiThinking this though as logically as I can.
So everything presumably worked ok before the thermostat was changed. AC system wasn't touched and I imagine it would be a really unlucky coincidence that the compressor or AC system developed a fault as a result of the thermostat being changed, given there isn't any interaction between these two systems.
So the car was previously operating with very high fuel consumption, it would be reasonable to conclude then that the car was over fueling and running very inefficiently.
Now there are two ways to regulate the idle on modern cars, an electronic air idle control valve, or more recently an electronic throttle butterfly that is opened and closed to regulate the idle.
As stated, previously everything was working, the car, aircon etc was functioning just with high consumption so it maybe the car was operating with the butterfly open more than is would be normally trying to control fueling with a cold engine.
Weird question perhaps but is the cutting out issue better or worse when the engine is hot/cold. Ie when its cold is it more likely to cut out, when its warm or is it about the same? Just something to think about.
When the car engine is cold, it operates in "open loop" the oxygen sensor needs to be warm to function therefore until it has warmed up idle is usually maintained higher until the oxygen sensor is warm and it can switch to operating in "closed loop" when the oxygen readings dictate the fueling. If the car is running in open loop with a cold engine then I might expect it to work much like before the thermostat was changed and be less likely to stall at idle.
So that might point towards the issue.
I would be inclined to take a Neanderthalic approach to this and rather than thinking that the scanner is going to give you all the answers (if its a cheap one from HongKong the information it gives is going to be limited to just reading out codes)
Instead I would take the air box off, run it on the drive without the airbox, to answer the question 'is the engine getting enough air' if there is a restriction in the air box or filter this might affect idle.
The engine and valves might be badly coked up if its been running badly for some time, so I would then spray a can of carb cleaner into the throttle body while the engine is running (not all in one go, short little bursts) if there is a lot of build up on the valves then they might be restricting airflow.
So once you have sprayed a can of carb cleaner into and left it running for a bit to burn off any residual cleaner turn the car off.
Locate the fuse for the ECU and pull it.
Walk a way and have a cup of tea for an hour.
This should reset the parameters of the ecu to a default setting. no different to turning your computer off and on again when it stops working or crashing.
This will set the cars ECU to a sort of safe mode that will operate the engine, slightly less efficiently but without issue. It then needs time in closed loop, to learn the best way to handle the fueling and idle of the engine, so taking for a long run. (probably put the air box and filter back on)
Other things to check (panda people will have to help me here) is the mass airflow sensor in the airfilter box, is there an intake air temperature sensor on these? are these sensors plugging in and working if the mechanic took the airbox off he might have damaged one of these or not plugged them back in correctly.
I think if you can do these things over the weekend you probably wont need to worry about the code reader and you might well solve your problem. If not you have the added back up of the code reader coming and you can then see if it is throwing up any errors.
I think its unlikely the button or the compressor is causing the issue. and I think 800rpm might be fine as idle with the AC off and ie no load on the engine and a nice warm engine running closed loop but I's expect it to be higher when the engine is cold and operating in open loop.
You are correct. At start up, with cold engine, the A/C does not stall the engine (all is fine). After around 5 minutes the rpm drop at idle and the A/C cuts the engine out. Without A/C at this point the idle is stable at 800rpm.
This was the only applicability that I could relate the change of thermostat to.
As we might understand the causal factor viz open loop control, any ideas as to how to fix it? Is one of the HEGO’s defective and was previously hidden by the defective thermostat?
The Scanner might indicate this?