Jump to content

FemiE

Members
  • Posts

    38
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Profile Information

  • Interests
    VAG & Skoda cars and SUVs
  • Location
    Lagos

Car Info

  • Model
    Octavia 2008 2.0L Petrol FSI
  • Year
    2008

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

FemiE's Achievements

Explorer

Explorer (4/17)

  • First Post
  • Collaborator
  • Conversation Starter
  • Week One Done
  • One Month Later

Recent Badges

2

Reputation

  1. Okay I will check both because I also had an overheating issue with an Octavia MK2 where the engine thermostat was not allowing proper coolant flow through the engine so the coolant was boiling out in the filler tank while the coolant temperature sensor was reporting a low temperature and failing to trigger the radiator fans.
  2. Not replaced but I can do this today as I should have an old spare which I think is in good working condition. In relation to the catalyst incident related above I know that happened at about the same time the engine overheated as the fan control module failed to automatically start up the fan as the engine warmed up and got very hot. I will update later today with result of changing coolant thermostat and confirming throttle body-ECU mapping. Is there also an engine thermostat that may be causing this problem and if so where should I look for it?
  3. Hi Wino, thanks for the prompt response. Let me chip in an incident that happened while working on this car if it may have resulted in what I am facing now. I noticed a very red hot glow on the catalyst immediately after the exhaust manifold which was very unusual. I took out the catalyst unit and it appeared to have fused and blocked so I yanked out the whole catalyst and fitted it back. Could this alone result in the very high fuel consumption (1.5L - 5L/hour on idle) and car stalling? Of did I damage the precat lambda probe or something related to the pre and post cat lambda probes? Can a stuck open EGR be responsible? Thanks.
  4. Hi Wino and all helpers. I am finally back to this car after being away to attend to other cars and other matters. To continue the troubleshooting of this Fabia can someone help with ECU pinout for the throttle body and other vital components that may be affecting the fuel consumption rate and/or manifold pressure? I want to doublecheck all this again before asking the mechanic to take down the intake manifold and possibly top cylinder and reinstall. Many thanks for your ongoing assistance.
  5. Hi Vino, quite some time out as I was busy attending to other cars, I finally checked the voltage on pin 3 and it was 4.96v and same voltage was recorded on pin 2. Is this normal? I still can't figure out why the MAP errors are occurring. I have swapped all these devices (MAP sensor, EVAP, throttle body & EGR) but the high absolute pressure values, correlation errors and high fuel consumption of the order of 4-5L/hour in idle mode and in motion eventually resulting in car stalling persisted.
  6. I missed the voltage check and tested only for continuity but I will go back to confirm that. It skipped my mind.
  7. I am at a loss why the ECU will be doing this. Could it be due to dodgy or broken cabling between the ECU & throttle body? Which wires/pins on both side should I be checking and what voltage/resistance values should I expect other than simply confirming continuity?
  8. I checked these 2 days ago and confirmed wiring between MAP sensor and ECU was okay for all those pins.
  9. I removed and checked the pre-cat probe today and found it was physically okay covered with soot which we wiped clean. However, I could not ascertain its real performance with vehicle running as a rainstorm interrupted the diagnosis. I will plug in VCDS and take some data as soon as possible.
  10. While reviewing the activities that took place before experiencing this stalling & high fuel consumption, I was reminded by my partner with whom I was working on the electricals of the cooling system that the problem started after we asked a mechanic to pull out the exhaust manifold housing the catalyst and yanked out the catalyst which had become blocked due to overheating. Could it be that the exhaust manifold was not properly reinstalled leading to exhaust leaks causing either or both the pre-cat and post-cat O2S to send wrong data to ECU causing ECU to signal demand for more fuel?
  11. I agree more with your conclusion @LB123 so I will make re-installation of the intake manifold and its accessories the priority.
  12. @LB123, based on your advice i swapped the MAP/IAT sensosensor and the problem persisted. I discussed this with a mechanic friend who indicated that the excess fuel being dumped into the engine may be due to faulty valves/valve seals or these not sitting well and thus allowing for unburnt fuel which I see as soot in my exhaust. But I am still eager to know the actual root cause of this problem so I have asked him to pull the intake manifold and reinstall with good sealing. He will also be checking the valves with the seals.
  13. Hi LB123. Thanks for your prompt response. I am also concerned about this. I can get a working a working MAP sensor from a similar car fixed to test. Are you suspecting the MAP ismalfunctioning or what could be inducing this high MAP values? Is it the high MAP values that is trigerring the high fuel consumption?
  14. Hello people. Car overheated while fixing non working coolant fan but after cooling was resolved the car started stalling every time after running idle for a few minutes or after throttling RPM above 1000. Fuel consumption indicator on dash was about 0.7L/H before problem started but now very erratic and varies widely between 1.4L/H to 5L/H with black soot coming out of exhaust. Also noticed with VCDS that intake manifold pressure now varies between 500 - 900 units. No engine fault code is being logged while all these is happening. Please help.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Welcome to BRISKODA. Please note the following important links Terms of Use. We have a comprehensive Privacy Policy. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.