Gayle,
Go and get yourself one of those fuel saver magnets and stick it on your exhaust.
The magnets will hold back all the crap coming out of your engine and, hey presto, you pass your emissions test.
Do I win $5?
Ian
This is not my car. It is the 90 525 that hubby trashed with lame maintenance. 200k miles overall but only 35 on rebuilt engine (timing belt broke). Have searched and read all the threads on smog and emisson. My question is there any specific problem that causes high levels of nitrogen oxide?
Here the readings:
15/25 RPM 1787/2782
15/25 %CO2 14.0/13.8
15/25 %O2 .6/.6 Did I read somewhere that CO2 and O2 are supposed to be about the same?
15/25 HC Max allowed 108/83 Our car 23/24
15/25 CO Max allowed .71/.58 Our car .11/.20
Not bad on HC and CO but so what. I read that all cars are ok on HC and CO and that is why they went to 4 or 5 gas tests. The print out doesn't give allowables or averages for CO2 or O2 so don't know if those readings are ok or not.
The killer
15/25 NO (PPM) Max 767/706 our car 884/1124 I feel personally responsible for acid rain now.
Here is the link to the most informative site I found, but doesn't say anything about NO.
http://www.visi.com/~rhayman/smog_fa...Catalyst%20Out
Told hubby to drive it and get the cat hot before test. He interpreted that to mean drive 5 minutes to the next freeway exit. He will get it really hot next time and will talk them into testing it hot. With 4 cars we are one of their best customers. Read today the cat needs to be 550. Does it really get that hot?
After reading all the prior posts here is my plan:
Got the oil changed today. Will put a new air filter in.
Did the stomp test. The check engine light blinked like it was supposed to but no codes came up. Don't know what to think about that. Any ideas?
I figure it is really dirty in there. About 3 months ago, hubby put STP oil treatment in there to deal with the value noise after consulting with the guy at Pep Boys who told him he needed to goop it up, not clean it out. Wince. It pains me to write that. It started running ragged and idling crappy after that but sort of got ok after I started putting Shell gas in it. After reading all the posts about seaform, I decided to cast my vote with Bill R and not do it. After reading all I could about the various products decided we are going the slow but safe way with auto-rx. In fact we are going to take a weekend roadtrip to San Francisco in the 525 so we can put a quick 1000 miles for the cleaning phase. (Don't worry. No pics).
Read a post on some random site that turned up in search about one possible cause for high NO might be clogged valve to EGR (emission gass recirculator). Can't find anything by that name in Bentleys. Do our cars have that? Different name? If there is something that does the same job as egr, would the auto-rx clean it? If not, is there a way to clean it? Any thoughts?
Did a novel thing. Looked under the hood. Saw two things that made me want to throw up. There was one hose that looked worse than Winfred's knee booger. There was something else that looked like it should be attached to another something and wasn't. I will have to take pictures and post to have someone tell me what they are so I can read about them I find out if they could be a part of this problem.
I am actually not sorry this happened. We will be selling it and I would like to get it to decent shape first. It is an education for me. Thanks for your help.
Dinan chip, Bilstein sports w H&R, RD sways, RD strut brace, 750 bushings, Zimmermans/MetalMasters, O.E. M Pars, Eisenmann muffler
Gayle,
Go and get yourself one of those fuel saver magnets and stick it on your exhaust.
The magnets will hold back all the crap coming out of your engine and, hey presto, you pass your emissions test.
Do I win $5?
Ian
No but stick 'em on Ebay and you'll make $50,000.00!Originally Posted by EonPeon
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1990 E34 535iA, 215,000kms (130,000 miles).
Dual Climate, Rear Headrests, Rollerblind, M-Tech Wheel,
Memory Seats, EAT Chip, T-Stars.
theres no egr on a m20 motor, the "rebuild in a can" in the oil and a cold cat could of screwed the test, a good italian tune up right before testing may do it good, our emissions testing consists of pressure testing the gas cap so i am not sure on the fine points
all america wants is cold beer warm cat and a place to take a poop with a door on it
high performance cars with large lift cams and high compression also had very high levels of nox. Anything you do to reduce the amount of energy being produced will lower your nox levels. If your running regular instead of premium your nox will be higher since theres more energy being released in regular since it burns more rapidly, so running premium will make a little difference. Running the 10% ethanol blends will also help since this reduces the amount of power in the fuel also. which will lower combustion chamber temps. The cat is going to make the biggest difference, so make sure its completely warmed up and don't shut it down any longer than needed while waiting to be tested.
If its badly in need of a tuneup that will make a difference, anything that causes pinging will raise nox also.
Originally Posted by Gayle
I have seen references to italian tune ups and don't know what that means. Could you explain?Originally Posted by winfred
Dinan chip, Bilstein sports w H&R, RD sways, RD strut brace, 750 bushings, Zimmermans/MetalMasters, O.E. M Pars, Eisenmann muffler
flogg it hard
all america wants is cold beer warm cat and a place to take a poop with a door on it
Prior to the widespread availablilty of "Three-way-catalysts", Exhaust Gas Recirculation was used to lower the peak combustion temperature in the cylinder to reduce formation of oxides of nitrogen. Your car doesn't have Exhaust Gas Recirculation, so it uses a three-way-catalyst to decompose NOx into its component parts. If you car is failing NOx and the italian tuneup doesn't work, it's NEW CAT TIME!!! Yay. It is a very good idea to run the emissions test with the cat as hot as possible.
If I were you I'd be kickin' the ass of anyone who even *thinks* about buying something that bears the dreaded STP initials. Not to mention taking the advice of some goober that works in a Pep Boys.
Italian Tune-Ups are just taking the car out and ROMPING on it. Get the engine really hot, the exhaust really hot, and redlining the motor and generally taking the car to its limits.
yea and if it farts out a good sized cloud the first couple times it hits the redline that's a good thing, thats the carbon
all america wants is cold beer warm cat and a place to take a poop with a door on it