
Originally Posted by
e34.535i.sport
Haha hey Colin was hoping you'd spot this one! Really enjoyed testing the 535i at yours that time which give me the inspiration!

Yes I can imagine routing the wire through the bulkhead will be a pain!
Yes the vacuum guage does T-in to one of the hoses but I wasn't sure which one to go for... I read somewhere that it must be forward of the throttle body?
And thanks Tiger that definitely got my attention - Looks awesome! I found a similar uk reader that I'm very interested in -
http://www.vi-performance.com/homepage.aspx ... I really fancy getting one of these although I don't think I read anywhere on the site that it measures the vacuum... And as it works through the ODB port I'm not sure it could (as accurately as a normal gauge at least) (?) You can pick one of these up on ebay for £225 delivered which isn't bad at all...

Hi.
Any one of those scan tools that use the OBD plug would certainly be the go.
No - they don't measure vacuum though. If you had forced induction then they would certainly read boost as there is always a boost sensor, but no normally aspirated engine has a sensor for vacuum that I'm aware of.
I don't think thats a concern though, because with your problems a vacuum guage is not going to show the cause, only the effect. Its not as if you have a constant problem like a burnt valve which would have the engine misbehaving at all times. And you can always plug a handheld vacuum guage in to take readings to eliminate that sort of thing anyway.
By the way - a vacuum guage does not go before the throttle body! It goes into any line that has a direct connection to the manifold proper. In the manifold between the throttle body and the inlet valves in the head is where the vacuum is formed and this is where you measure it.
If you've done all the usual things like plugs, igniters, fuel filters and looked for vacuum leaks, then replacing the O2 sensor(s) might be a good next step. The fast reacting one mentioned in the post is a wide band O2 and it can certainly cause the engine to misfire and do
things if its faulty.
But if you haven't done the fuel filters yet - do them first. #1 on the list of a fuel injected car if its doing silly things is replace the fuel filter(s) - they also can do the weidest things to an engine that you would never imagine they could.
ss2115.
BMW 525i Touring - 1993 (current drive car).
DS23 Citroen Safari - 1974 (restoration and modifications).
Golf MkIII - 1997 (fun car and daughters learn-to-drive car)