Matts440
Well-Known Member
After. I'll check the toothI noticed the first tooth after the missing tooth looks way too close. Check that tooth for Nick's. Does it stall before you let off the starter or after?
After. I'll check the toothI noticed the first tooth after the missing tooth looks way too close. Check that tooth for Nick's. Does it stall before you let off the starter or after?
From what I can see and feel the tooth looks and feels like all the others.I noticed the first tooth after the missing tooth looks way too close. Check that tooth for Nick's. Does it stall before you let off the starter or after?
I sure can, I'll get it done today and upload it. Thank you for helpingCan we try a tooth log instead of a composite log? These are a bit easier to read on missing tooth wheels.
So you think moving the sensor closer would help? Like .015OK, this log looks like the teeth are normal, but it's barely catching. I don't think this is a lost sync issue, so much as the engine is not running well and losing sync when it stalls.
Oh okay. I've tested each circuit of the injectors, they fire as they should and in order, 2 sprays per signal, except for #2 when first tested only sprayed once, but sent the signal again and it did 2. Fuel pressure is 43psi. All plugs were wet so I know the injectors are spraying. Tank has just under half. Main pump is on a switch with it's own power source, second pump the same just grounded through the ECM at a certain rpm.No - I think the sensor and crank trigger are doing their jobs fine. Something else is causing the stall and then the stall causes sync loss. You're chasing the effect instead of the cause here. I would look for fuel related issues next.
I use a diode to check the signal to the I injectors. I can pull some fuel out lower down. I do not have one of those. Current settings, they are 120lb injectorsTwo sprays per signal? How exactly are you testing them? I'm wondering if the problem is too much fuel and not too little.
You don't by any chance have an oscilloscope?
Nope it all stayed together, I did have to remove one rocker assembly due to a lock breaking, but was torqued back to spec and lash set to spec at cold per hughes racing site, only thing that came off was the throttle body and the front cover with oil pan.Matt - did the heads come off when you pulled the motor? Could this be bad valve lash on a cylinder maybe?
Yep, not sure where it all came from. Looks like the foam pieces, Aluminum and dirt. I removed the foam with the lid on and even vacuumed the cell before I even put fuel in for the first time. Dirt from the local gas station in their fuel.What is it? That’s all from your fuel tank?
I wouldn’t think flow would be an issue with those filters if you can’t even get the thing to idle.Wonder if my summit fuel filters dont flow enough, I have a 100 micron before both fuel pumps and a 10 at the intake
I wouldn’t think mechanical noise from valve train would generate enough Emi to step on the crank trigger signal. Just make sure crank and cam sensor leads don’t run close or parallel to high voltage wires like coil or alternator. They can go across the wires ok, you just don’t want them running close and/or parallel for any significant length.Well fuel elements are on back order from summit and through trick flow. But was thinking would the valve train noise cause the signal loss if the wiring was low down between the VC and the injectors? Just going over everything again and rechecking all grounds, moved one from chassis to batt ground, even though it ran fine before where the ground was.
I was figuring that but thought I'd try. Yeah the signal were for the crank is on the opposite side of the alternator wire, and the cam routes under it.I wouldn’t think mechanical noise from valve train would generate enough Emi to step on the crank trigger signal. Just make sure crank and cam sensor leads don’t run close or parallel to high voltage wires like coil or alternator. They can go across the wires ok, you just don’t want them running close and/or parallel for any significant length.