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I recently blew a head gasket in my 1990 civic wagon, and after
replacing the gasket and re-machining the head, along with changing the belts and adjusting the timing i'm back on the road. the troubling thing is that my fuel economy was nothing special to begin with (26mpg), but after the repairs it has dropped to 18mpg! any ideas on what could be causing this and how to fix it? thanks! theo |
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theo.chan@gmail.com wrote:
> I recently blew a head gasket in my 1990 civic wagon, and after > replacing the gasket and re-machining the head, along with changing the > belts and adjusting the timing i'm back on the road. > > the troubling thing is that my fuel economy was nothing special to > begin with (26mpg), but after the repairs it has dropped to 18mpg! any > ideas on what could be causing this and how to fix it? > > thanks! > theo > ------------------------ Does it lack power / sputter for the first few minutes until the engine starts to warm up? If so, your timing belt is probably out one tooth. Mileage will suffer. Did you change the PCV while you were under the hood too? 'Curly' |
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Thanks for the quick reply. I didn't change the PCV valve, but the car
starts fine and gives power right away. I heard that perhaps the ECU needs to be reset, but theoretically it should already be reset because I had disconnected the battery. Although I didn't give the ECU an idle learn; I went ahead and revved up to about 5000rpm to test whether the engine would overheat or not. Would it be possible the ECU was not reset or that I didn't "teach" it properly? If I break the fuse when pulling out the hazard fuse will I still be able to drive? Are there any risks to resetting the ECU? What other possible causes are there for this poor fuel economy? from 26mpg to 18mpg is a huge drop that I'm not sure just a faulty ECU would cause. With gas costing $1.02/litre here, I'm anxious to get back to at least 26mpg if not better! Theo motsco_ _ wrote: > theo.chan@gmail.com wrote: > > I recently blew a head gasket in my 1990 civic wagon, and after > > replacing the gasket and re-machining the head, along with changing the > > belts and adjusting the timing i'm back on the road. > > > > the troubling thing is that my fuel economy was nothing special to > > begin with (26mpg), but after the repairs it has dropped to 18mpg! any > > ideas on what could be causing this and how to fix it? > > > > thanks! > > theo > > > ------------------------ > > Does it lack power / sputter for the first few minutes until the engine > starts to warm up? If so, your timing belt is probably out one tooth. > Mileage will suffer. Did you change the PCV while you were under the > hood too? > > 'Curly' |
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theo.chan@gmail.com wrote:
> Thanks for the quick reply. I didn't change the PCV valve, but the car > starts fine and gives power right away. I heard that perhaps the ECU > needs to be reset, but theoretically it should already be reset because > I had disconnected the battery. Although I didn't give the ECU an idle > learn; I went ahead and revved up to about 5000rpm to test whether the > engine would overheat or not. > > Would it be possible the ECU was not reset or that I didn't "teach" it > properly? If I break the fuse when pulling out the hazard fuse will I > still be able to drive? Are there any risks to resetting the ECU? > > What other possible causes are there for this poor fuel economy? from > 26mpg to 18mpg is a huge drop that I'm not sure just a faulty ECU would > cause. With gas costing $1.02/litre here, I'm anxious to get back to at > least 26mpg if not better! > > Theo check for coolant leakage - look inside the radiator, not the expansion bottle. that's probably why you lost your head gasket in the first place. insufficient coolant means the ecu's getting the wrong signal and goes "rich". > > motsco_ _ wrote: > >>theo.chan@gmail.com wrote: >> >>>I recently blew a head gasket in my 1990 civic wagon, and after >>>replacing the gasket and re-machining the head, along with changing the >>>belts and adjusting the timing i'm back on the road. >>> >>>the troubling thing is that my fuel economy was nothing special to >>>begin with (26mpg), but after the repairs it has dropped to 18mpg! any >>>ideas on what could be causing this and how to fix it? >>> >>>thanks! >>>theo >>> >> >>------------------------ >> >>Does it lack power / sputter for the first few minutes until the engine >>starts to warm up? If so, your timing belt is probably out one tooth. >>Mileage will suffer. Did you change the PCV while you were under the >>hood too? >> >>'Curly' > > |
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yeah but you have the right power does not mean you have the right mileage. Possibly after you replaced the head gasket, the engine requires more gas to generate the same power before the head gasket was replaced. |
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