I just received my mechanical vacuum gauge from Ebay today. I was looking for a place to T in and the only place I see is the vacuum hose at the very base of the throttle plate that leads to the vacuum advance on the electronic ignition.
I tried to T into that, but the gauge doesn't budge even when revving to about 4k RPM. I disconnected the hose and tried sucking on it and the gauge works fine.
What is that "body" that the vacuum advance hose connects to (at the base of the throttle body)? Is there an EGR valve in there or anything else that can be plugged?
Aside from fixing that issue, is there anywhere else I should be T'ing the gauge into?
82 FI Vacuum
- bran100
- Posts: 155
- Joined: Thu Feb 08, 2007 12:34 am
- Your car is a: 1982 Spider
- Location: Draper, Utah
82 FI Vacuum
Brandon
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- bran100
- Posts: 155
- Joined: Thu Feb 08, 2007 12:34 am
- Your car is a: 1982 Spider
- Location: Draper, Utah
I T'd it into the vacuum line that went to some sort of fuel/vacuum diaphram on the driver's side of the block and the gauge works great. Now I just need to decipher what it means.
On another note, how about having no vacuum on the hose that leads from the base of the throttle plate to the distributor? I took the intake hose off of the throttle body and I see a bit of oil in there. It's not a lot, so I assume it's normal? Is there some type of EGR valve that could be plugged up?
On another note, how about having no vacuum on the hose that leads from the base of the throttle plate to the distributor? I took the intake hose off of the throttle body and I see a bit of oil in there. It's not a lot, so I assume it's normal? Is there some type of EGR valve that could be plugged up?
Brandon
Lots of pics: https://www.adoberevel.com/shares/cc771 ... 197cf3ce11
Lots of pics: https://www.adoberevel.com/shares/cc771 ... 197cf3ce11
no egr on FI cars. What you're seeing is oily residue from the crankcase vent. That could plug up the ported vacuum nipple to the dist. It can also build up on the edge of the throttle plate causing a stumble on acceleration or causing the throttle plate to hang open slightly. When you rev the engine can you see the vacuum advance arm on the dist move?
- bran100
- Posts: 155
- Joined: Thu Feb 08, 2007 12:34 am
- Your car is a: 1982 Spider
- Location: Draper, Utah
The vacuum arm doesn't budge a bit when accelerating or otherwise.
Brandon
Brandon
Brandon
Lots of pics: https://www.adoberevel.com/shares/cc771 ... 197cf3ce11
Lots of pics: https://www.adoberevel.com/shares/cc771 ... 197cf3ce11
- bran100
- Posts: 155
- Joined: Thu Feb 08, 2007 12:34 am
- Your car is a: 1982 Spider
- Location: Draper, Utah
Shall I assume that I need to remove the throttle body and clean everything? I'll be able to access that block where the vacuum hose attaches that way?
Brandon
Lots of pics: https://www.adoberevel.com/shares/cc771 ... 197cf3ce11
Lots of pics: https://www.adoberevel.com/shares/cc771 ... 197cf3ce11
- bran100
- Posts: 155
- Joined: Thu Feb 08, 2007 12:34 am
- Your car is a: 1982 Spider
- Location: Draper, Utah
Blowing through the hose didn't work, but taking the throttle body apart and cleaning it did. The orifice was a lot smaller than I expected. Easy to clog up. Now that the hose pulls a vacuum, I find that the vacuum lever still doesn't move though. I guess there were multiple problems. I'll order a new one tomorrow.
As an educational lesson, can someone 'school' me on the following.....?
I cleaned the housing and throttle plate with carb cleaner. There was a bit of a buildup on the edges of the plate. I also cleaned out any orifices that I could see. After cleaning, the car now idles at about 1200 RPM when it used to idle at about 900. What exactly happened that increased the idle RPM?
Thanks for the lesson.
As an educational lesson, can someone 'school' me on the following.....?
I cleaned the housing and throttle plate with carb cleaner. There was a bit of a buildup on the edges of the plate. I also cleaned out any orifices that I could see. After cleaning, the car now idles at about 1200 RPM when it used to idle at about 900. What exactly happened that increased the idle RPM?
Thanks for the lesson.
Brandon
Lots of pics: https://www.adoberevel.com/shares/cc771 ... 197cf3ce11
Lots of pics: https://www.adoberevel.com/shares/cc771 ... 197cf3ce11
- bran100
- Posts: 155
- Joined: Thu Feb 08, 2007 12:34 am
- Your car is a: 1982 Spider
- Location: Draper, Utah
So with air bypassing around the throttle plate, there is more air volume entering the engine that results in a leaner mixture that in turn increases idle?
Forgive my ignorance, I'm just trying to understand the basics of the mechanics of it.
Forgive my ignorance, I'm just trying to understand the basics of the mechanics of it.
Brandon
Lots of pics: https://www.adoberevel.com/shares/cc771 ... 197cf3ce11
Lots of pics: https://www.adoberevel.com/shares/cc771 ... 197cf3ce11