Voyager Dead ... Kinda
Paul94Z28
08-18-2008, 10:48 PM
Hi-
My 97 GV was running fine. 140K on the clock, needs an intake manifold gasket, used to throw the EGR code, ac no hold a charge, etc, etc..
I am driving home and it fails and will not restart, seems like no fuel. After a couple of minutes it starts and I get it home. I pull the codes and it indicates misfire cylinder #2 and lean condition (but no code). I have tried to start it a few times since. Sometimes it will not start, other times it does and I can drive it. It feels kinda sluggish though. I put a guage on the fuel rail and it is about 50 psi at idle and wot. I replaced the distributor about a year ago to get rid of a cel because of that. Plugs and wires are two years old.
Needless to say, no roadtrips until I figure this out.
Thoughts?
Paul
My 97 GV was running fine. 140K on the clock, needs an intake manifold gasket, used to throw the EGR code, ac no hold a charge, etc, etc..
I am driving home and it fails and will not restart, seems like no fuel. After a couple of minutes it starts and I get it home. I pull the codes and it indicates misfire cylinder #2 and lean condition (but no code). I have tried to start it a few times since. Sometimes it will not start, other times it does and I can drive it. It feels kinda sluggish though. I put a guage on the fuel rail and it is about 50 psi at idle and wot. I replaced the distributor about a year ago to get rid of a cel because of that. Plugs and wires are two years old.
Needless to say, no roadtrips until I figure this out.
Thoughts?
Paul
Bear
08-19-2008, 02:19 PM
I would run it by Auto Zone for a free scan, it could be a crankshaft position (CPS) sensor or a camshaft position sensor, on my '98 neon the problem you describe was a bad CPS.
RIP
08-19-2008, 06:14 PM
You must have a scanner if you are getting a misfire #2 indication. I'll second Bear's pick of a cam or crank sensor. They can and do fail regularly without generating a code. Check their wire harnesses and connections first to make sure all is well. Why were you getting a misfire code? Might be because when a cm or ck sensor goes beyond spec the PCM will kill power to the coil, injectors and O2 sensors to kill the engine and prevent excessive emissions.
Paul94Z28
10-20-2008, 09:40 PM
It was the fuel pump - only failed when hot.
Fixed it and we are back on the road.
Fixed it and we are back on the road.
RIP
10-20-2008, 09:49 PM
Can't get much leaner than no fuel from a fuel pump. Thanks for coming back and posting the fix.
Automotive Network, Inc., Copyright ©2026
