RE: Code 52

From: Bernd D. Ratsch (bernd@texas.net)
Date: Fri Jul 04 2003 - 11:14:09 EDT


Good Guess Jon. That's what happens.

- Bernd

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-dakota-truck@bent.twistedbits.net
[mailto:owner-dakota-truck@bent.twistedbits.net] On Behalf Of
jon@dakota-truck.net
Sent: Thursday, July 03, 2003 11:09 PM
To: dakota-truck-moderator@bent.twistedbits.net
Subject: Re: DML: Code 52

JAMEPC@aol.com wrote:
[...]
: How is the PCM compensating for the rich mixture?
: negative 600 micro seconds of what?

   If I had to guess (and I am) ;-) I'd say its adjusting the
fuel injector pulse width. (The amount of time each injector stays open
during the intake cycle.) Because fuel pressure is constant, pulse
width is how the computer adds and
subtracts fuel. The longer the injector stays open, the
more fuel is pumped through it, and the richer the mixture. (And vice
versa, of course.)

  I don't know for sure that is what it refers to but it would seem to
be a logical assumption.

  As far as what might be causing the problem, I would probably consider
two basic possibilities:

   - The computer is correct and the air/fuel ratio is too rich
  
     This is caused by too much fuel or not enough air. Not
     enough air doesn't seem very likely except in an extreme
     case, but its easy enough to verify by a quick visual
     inspection of the air path from the inlet to the throttle
     body. More likely would be too much fuel, perhaps caused
     by a leaky injector(s), defective injector(s) which is/are
     constantly squirting some amount of fuel even when they
     are supposed to be closed, or possibly abnormally high
     fuel pressure. The fuel pressure is easy to check if you
     have a test port on the fuel rail. As far as leaky/gummed
     up injectors go, you may want to try running a bottle of
     fuel injector cleaner through the tank or pulling the
     injectors for a visual inspection and cleaning.

   - The computer is incorrect - it only *thinks* your air/fuel
     ratio is too rich.

     A defective oxygen sensor may be reading constantly rich;
     if your upstream O2 sensor is over 50,000 miles old, its
     probably not a bad idea to think about changing it anyway.

  I'm sure I missed about a bazillion other possible causes; everything
from a weak spark resulting in incomplete combustion to a defective PCM,
but the above items came to mind as far as the most likely explanations,
and they are also fairly easy to check.

  Good luck!

-- 

-Jon-

.---- Jon Steiger ------ jon@dakota-truck.net or jon@jonsteiger.com ------. | I'm the: AOPA, DoD, EAA, NMA, NRA, SPA, USUA. Rec & UL Pilot - SEL | | 70 Cuda, 90 Dak 'vert, 92 Ram 4x4, 96 Dak, 96 Intruder 1400, 96 FireFly | `------------------------------------------ http://www.jonsteiger.com ----'



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