ablister 31 Posted August 13, 2004 Just put my cat through the mot yesterday and failed on emissions It came out at 8%, where it should be about 3% i think. What can cause it, the guy said it might be needing a service, plugs, filter, or a new sensor etc but it smokes alot so i'm guessing it's valve stem oil seals or worse piston rings. How can i tell what it is and how easy will it be to put right, i have a week to get it sorted. Any help is appreciated ali Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
woodsy 0 Posted August 13, 2004 if it was me i would give it a bit of service (oil change,plugs and air filter) and clean breathers out.Then adjust mixture on airflowmeter if tester will allow that when he does it again Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ablister 31 Posted August 13, 2004 in what way do i adjust the air flow meter? ie what way should i turn the screw? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AndyR 0 Posted August 13, 2004 It smokes alot? Does your car use alot of oil? Towards the end my 1.6 used to burn about a litre a week! It badly needed stem seals doing and the piston rings were probably knackered too. You could see if the engine is running rich by looking at the spark plugs. If they are black its likely the engine is too rich and running sooty..making plugs black. Then you would adjust the AFM with the hex (allen) bolt. I cant remember which way is lean out. If you do a search it may turn up. Other than previously suggested you might have to have a head rebuild or new rings. But then youd have a nice healthy engine again with good compression. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pug_ham 244 3 Cars Posted August 14, 2004 Try giving the whole of the intake system & breather pipes a good clean out with carb cleaner, including a good scrub inside the AFM & throttle body before you go adjusting it randomly but iirc the Haynes manual does tell you what direction to turn the screw for adjusting mixture. When was it last fully serviced with a new air filter etc as well though as an old clogged air filter can cause the emissions to rise quite a bit. (You could also pull the breather pipe that goes to the inlet system from the oil filler cap off if needed to lower the emissions a bit. ) Graham. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
christopher 5 1 Cars Posted August 14, 2004 (edited) Try giving the whole of the intake system & breather pipes a good clean out with carb cleaner, including a good scrub inside the AFM & throttle body before you go adjusting it randomly but iirc the Haynes manual does tell you what direction to turn the screw for adjusting mixture. You turn it out to make it leaner if you have new plugs, dizzy & rotor, oil and you turn the AFM out as much as you can...and no joy then you either need a new one AFM or repair it maybe... Edited August 14, 2004 by christopher Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ahl 4 Posted August 14, 2004 I didn't think MI16's had a lean screw on the AFM? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
christopher 5 1 Cars Posted August 14, 2004 I didn't think MI16's had a lean screw on the AFM? daaam i forget most you boys are on Mi's.....right Ahl Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Alastairh 47 Posted August 14, 2004 Do a compression test, that should tell you the truth about your piston rings. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
mi16nut 0 Posted August 14, 2004 To be honest, you're better off taking it somewhere with diagnostics. Mine failed last year on 3.56% CO2 (pass is 3.5%). I took it to my usual rolling road where he tweaked it properly & ensured fuelling was correct at high revs also. Cost: £20 including power run, so well worth it. You wouldn't want to ruin the engine by running it too lean. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
christopher 5 1 Cars Posted August 14, 2004 (edited) Do a compression test, that should tell you the truth about your piston rings. I have had a light skim...will a compression test tell me the true compression ratio? Edited August 14, 2004 by christopher Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pug_ham 244 3 Cars Posted August 15, 2004 I have had a light skim...will a compression test tell me the true compression ratio? Not straight away, I think you need some formula to calculate it from you bore & stroke & psi etc compared to a standard healthy engine but I'm not sure. Graham. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
eddie_1.9 1 Posted August 16, 2004 mi16nut or anyone else where did u get it tuned? any ideas where i can get mine rolling road tuned near guildford or within a 30 mile radius? i had my mixture tweaked at the MOT to get to pass too it was 3.58 but now 2.5. But i am a bit worried about it running too lean. for £20 i'd get it setup if i knew where to go. cheers guys. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rob_the_Sparky 9 Posted August 16, 2004 mi16nut or anyone else where did u get it tuned? any ideas where i can get mine rolling road tuned near guildford or within a 30 mile radius? i had my mixture tweaked at the MOT to get to pass too it was 3.58 but now 2.5. But i am a bit worried about it running too lean. for £20 i'd get it setup if i knew where to go.cheers guys. on a 1.9 8v the adjustment is for tickover only and should be 1 to 1.5% for a healthy 1.9. You are not going to damage anything by runing lean (even if you were) as it is only tick-over mixture that is adjusted. Rob Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest birdii Posted August 16, 2004 (edited) You cannot adjust the mixture on a CAT car, believe me, i have tried. The ecu is running closed loop, so the lambda sensor will feed back to the ECU when the mixture is tweaked and then alter the fuel back to how it was. It might be worth trying a new lambda probe, doesn't cost much from gsf, 4 wire citroen universal probe, about £30. Other possible cause is a failing CAT, expensive! Of course if you have oil burning problems then that can cause both mentioned items to fail! Edited August 16, 2004 by birdii Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Minsc 0 Posted July 27, 2006 I have the same problem in my gti 1.9 cat, the CO emissions are about 8%, but my car hasn't cat because I taked out. In my car the mixture is not adjustable, I'm sure that the problem is the lambda probe or the airflowmeter. What AFM could I use in my 205? From what cars? Maybe 405 1.9, BX GTI? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pugpete1108 62 1 Cars Posted July 28, 2006 my hc levels were sky high on my last mot but the tester is a top bloke who elt it through anywy turns out it was a leak in the manfiold that did it Share this post Link to post Share on other sites