It is no secret that the IMRC's and poorly designed PCV setup on the 96-98 Cobra's cause a ton of carbon to build up on the secondary intake valve (the one behind the IMRC plate. This is especially bad in cars like mine since it is very rarely rev'd high enough to open the IMRC butterfly's, it is daily driven, and has been running the notoriously bad fram PCV valve.
I did a low pressure leakdown test last night and these were my results:
1- 29 %
3- 37 %
7- 35 %
2- 60 %
6- 28 %
5- 20 %
4- 28 %
8- 27 %
Pretty high all around, especially cylinders 3, 7, and 2. Air seems to be mostly escaping into the intake when testing all cylinders. Didn't see any bubbles in my coolant, and didn't hear much through the exhaust or dipstick tube.
This leads me to believe the issue is mostly caused by the intake valves poorly sealing. Since I've heard that these cars can have terrible carbon build up in as low as 40k miles (even with fairly aggressive driving), it doesn't seem to far fetched to believe that a motor with 60k of very very mild driving (and a poor pcv) could cause the secondary intake valve to build up so much carbon that it is causing a lot of leakdown.
If this is the case I've seen where people have successfully cleaned the intake valves by just pulling the intake/imrc's, then making sure the intake valves are closed and pouring in very strong carb cleaner, brushing the valves, then vacuuming out the excess liquid. Could this method clean them well enough to allow them to seal once again?
I did a low pressure leakdown test last night and these were my results:
1- 29 %
3- 37 %
7- 35 %
2- 60 %
6- 28 %
5- 20 %
4- 28 %
8- 27 %
Pretty high all around, especially cylinders 3, 7, and 2. Air seems to be mostly escaping into the intake when testing all cylinders. Didn't see any bubbles in my coolant, and didn't hear much through the exhaust or dipstick tube.
This leads me to believe the issue is mostly caused by the intake valves poorly sealing. Since I've heard that these cars can have terrible carbon build up in as low as 40k miles (even with fairly aggressive driving), it doesn't seem to far fetched to believe that a motor with 60k of very very mild driving (and a poor pcv) could cause the secondary intake valve to build up so much carbon that it is causing a lot of leakdown.
If this is the case I've seen where people have successfully cleaned the intake valves by just pulling the intake/imrc's, then making sure the intake valves are closed and pouring in very strong carb cleaner, brushing the valves, then vacuuming out the excess liquid. Could this method clean them well enough to allow them to seal once again?
Comment