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PCV valve

16K views 189 replies 8 participants last post by  ducmon  
#1 ·
Hi does my 2002 2.5MY have a PCV valve i cannot find it in the manual i have and cannot see one

Cheers
Dave
 
#2 ·
Deal with one problem at a time!

We are still waiting for the fuel trims.😎😎
 
#5 ·
You can make more problems than curing this way. You keep on asking for our advice on problems that we potentially have repaired on our cars and then ignore it.
 
#6 ·
Hi no I do not ignore anyone but the search engine does not bring up what i am after i put in PCV and it came back with nothing found so please do not insult me by saying I am ignoring people when you have not asked the correct questions I am very thanks full for all of the help i have been given

Dave
 
#7 ·
Nobody is trying to insult you; that said, to us it seems that you are thrashing about like a politician who needs to be seen doing "something" about a problem, even if it is the wrong thing...

The fuel trims are important because the small leak in the resonator in the intake [the box thingy...] is after the mass airflow sensor in the air flow within the engine intake system; thus, the engine management system possibly cannot adjust adequately for this unmetered air being introduced into the the combustion process, resulting in your poorly running engine. The fuel trims will help tell us what is going on.
 
#8 ·
Hi got some fuel trims STFT B2 jumping between +5-+7 B1n-21 LTFT both at zero.
Think i have more problems now as i am getting P0102 mass air flow sensor A circuit low, P0122 TP sensor circuit 1 low voltage and P0222 TP sensor 2 low voltage

It never rains
Dave
 
#9 ·
Sorry I was a bit short but the only way to find it you have an air leak is to use the fuel trims and brake cleaner or propane. Even a small one will cause massive problems. The more parts that you move the greater the potential for you to cause more problems.


You have to sort this problem before you damage expensive parts such as the catylists. When you have an air leak the ecu tries to add enough fuel to compensate for this. The air leak effect is reduced when you open the throttle but the ecu takes time to react. This means that the exhaust gases are incorrect and react with the platinum in the catylists eventually destroying them.
They can cost over 800 pounds each, yes you can get them on eBay for a lot less but there is no guarantee of the quality.
 
#10 ·
Right now we have something that we can work on the short term on bank 1 at - 21 is indicating that you had massive air leak as the cars ecu is now trying to reduce the amount of fuel being added to this bank.

The long term will also go into minus but this takes time but it must have been in this condition for some time because the long term will set a new zero for itself.
 
#12 ·
Have a look in the manual at the code. There will be pin point diagnostics for the MAF. Go through them and then you will know if you have to buy a new one or not.
 
#13 ·
Check your battery voltage first. This car will throw false codes of it low.
 
#14 ·
Forget the trims until you've fixed any problems flagged up. In any case read up on them (fuel trims) - what ones to note, when and why and you'll see you need the sensors etc to be working or the trims can be total garbage and thus misleading.

I agree with the advice to check the battery and if OK follow the manual about the codes you have.
 
#15 ·
Hi battery is good brand new and on charge all night so about 13.8V I am very thankfull for the information about the codes in the manual I have done some checks and have things to sort out but for the next tests I have to be at the ECU plug where is the ECU read somewhere it is under the pollen filter passenger side rear of engine bay but it does not look to be there have not removed the pollen filter yet in case i do not have too

Cheers
Dave
 
#22 ·
2.3-2.45 is battery charging voltage and the cell will stay at that voltage after the charger has been removed for a short time it takes 12-24 hours for a battery to equal out to its nominal voltage a charger should always give out between 13.8-14.5 volts lower and the battery will not fully charge and its life will be shortened as the plates sulfiate up

Dave
 
#24 ·
Hi bit of help advice please have started doing the tests as per pinpoint test N, N2 says to measure resistance between pin 2 and earth it says it should be lower than 5 ohms it says with the ignition on if i test with ignition on I get about 16 Ohms with the ignition off I get 3.5 Ohms does anyone know if ignition on is correct or should the ignition be off

Very many Thanks you are a great bunch
Dave
 
#29 ·
Fantastic many thanks I read somewhere about a vac hose going to the fuel tank do you know if this is correct on these cars

Cheers
Dave

Going back to your original post in this thread, here is a graphic of the vacuum line/hose connections and routing on the later version of the AJ-V6, courtesy of "rick" over on the "American" Jaguar forum:

View attachment 30390
 
#32 ·
2.3-2.45 is battery charging voltage and the cell will stay at that voltage after the charger has been removed for a short time it takes 12-24 hours for a battery to equal out to its nominal voltage a charger should always give out between 13.8-14.5 volts lower and the battery will not fully charge and its life will be shortened as the plates sulfiate up

Dave
All very interesting but my post referred to yours and was NOT about the charging voltage. It as and is about the battery voltage after getting rid of surface charge. You should not have 2.3V per cell at that point.
 
#41 ·
I think that's a reasonable move, Dave.

They can't often be cleaned successfully and can mislead to changing other parts before coming back to them again.

Let us know how you get on.

.