Engine running rough
Changed my back box, cat and down-pipe a few weeks back. Had problems getting sensors off and damaged one in the process. Replaced the pre cat one and all was well for a few days, then engine warning light came on.Hooked up OBD2 reader and discovered post cat sensor was faulty. Ordered up replacement but drove car for 10 days before i got it fitted. The day before i changed it the car started running rough and losing power. Even after changing sensor and erasing fault code ( which hasn't come back on ) the car is still running rough and losing power. It seemed fine on the motorway when i took it for a test drive after replacing the post cat sensor. But when driving in town its rough and sluggish. Driving me round the bend. Whats the most likely problem or problems:bang: ? :bang:
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- David Aiketgate
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- David
- mgf mk2 freestyle mpi 16" wheels, in Anthracite.
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Check for leaks on the exhaust manifold and down pipe. Double check the pre cat sensor.
If you have torque or similar, can you see the readings off the pre-cat sensor?
Other than that, it's back to basics. Check fuel, ignition, induction, timing...
David
:shrug:
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- talkingcars
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You really need a reader to see what is going on.
Home to black Alfa Romeo 159 3.2 V6 Q4 ,green MGF VVC and red MG Maestro T16.
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I would check the precat sensor maybe the wire has got damaged or it is a faulty sensor, in which case you may get a free replacement.
You could try swapping the post cat sensor for the pre cat I believe they are the same.
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- talkingcars
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Postman87 wrote: Thanks for the reply talkingcars. The reader I have is just a simple fault code reader. Can you point me in the right direction for a reader that can give me readings from the sensor.
The two I have are quite expensive at well over £100 each but they do so much more than the cheap ones.
The first is a scangauge2 and is purely an OBD2 reader, mine lives in my ZS mounted on the steering column and giving me four extra bits of information as I drive.
https://www.scangauge2.co.uk/
The second is a pscan, it is designed for MG/Rover applications and accesses most systems in our cars. It has to be used in conjunction with a laptop but can show you live data for all the ECU parameters as you're driven.
www.pscan.eu
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- David Aiketgate
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- David
- mgf mk2 freestyle mpi 16" wheels, in Anthracite.
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The cheapest way is to buy a Bluetooth OBD2 dongle and download Torque onto your android smartphone. You can then see all sorts of live data including outputs from the lambda sensors and engine coolant temp sensor etc. A faulty coolant sensor is another possibility.Postman87 wrote: Can you point me in the right direction for a reader that can give me readings from the sensor.
Apple phones need a WiFi OBD2 dongle.
David
:shrug:
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- NikTheGeek
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talkingcars wrote: The post cat sensor is purely to confirm the readings, it does not affect tune in anyway.
Is that just the case with these cars? Because it isn't the case with Nissan (Micras anyway). The post CAT sensor measures the output from the cat to ensure it is working efficiently and working together with the pre-cat sensor, adjusts the ECU. It's quite common for the post cat sensor to fail, pulling the pre-cat sensor out of spec, giving a bank 1 sensor 1 error. You change bank 1 sensor 1 and still have the error until you change bank 1 sensor 2.
I know that't not relevent here, just curious....
Nick
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- talkingcars
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Home to black Alfa Romeo 159 3.2 V6 Q4 ,green MGF VVC and red MG Maestro T16.
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