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Originally Posted by THE CAR GUY
Hopefully you have the problem fixed now but if not I have worked on quite a few of these and the most common problem is the injector and/or the supply lines in the intake. From what you describe and reading your other replys that would be my guess. And those other "mechanics" would know were the fuel smell is coming from if they had any clue. If the injector or supply lines were bad the car would run rich and not idle well and would very likely have a fuel smell. The reason why the engine would run rich if the supply lines were bad is because they are inside the intake. To find out if your injector is bad take the vehicle to a shop and have a fuel pressure test done. The fuel pressure with the engine not running should hold between 50-55psi. If the pressure comes up then drops right away the regulator is bad or one of the fuel lines has a hole in it. The injector can not be rebuilt and it has to be replaced as a unit and cost around $250. The supply lines cost $70 and are only avlable at the dealer. Hope this helps.
Daley
P.S. you should only pay 20-$40 to have the test done, it takes all of 2 minutes
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1) Welcome to the forum.
2) Forum rules:
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POSTING IN CLOSED OR OUTDATED THREADS:
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3) Why spend $40 to have the fuel pressure tested, when you can buy a gauge for $40, and never have to pay someone to test it again?
4) Here's a thread that explains this in more detail:
http://www.automotiveforums.com/vbul...d.php?t=462726