Hey guys - I've always wanted a Defender 90 and since my band started doing fairly well I compromised and got myself a Discovery. That way I can fit all 6 of us in and tow a trailer with gear, etc and the Def 90/120 was too small or not comfy enough.
I have an MR2 turbo so I roughly know how turbos work and I've had three Capris in the past which I used to service so I know roughly how engines work but diesels are a bit...odd...to me.
I have a problem though and it's got me pretty stumped.
When I bought the 200tdi it seemed fine, a bit of a boat compared to what I was used to but it pulled alright and got me home no probs. Then it sat on my driveway waiting to get used for a few months and (possibly due to an aftermarket alarm) the battery ran flat. I replaced the battery with a non-LR item and since then the Disco's just been, well, rubbish.
It had a very low and slightly rough idle when I took it out for a run a few weeks back and there was no power at all. It struggled to get over 30-40mph even with the go pedal flat to the floor and rather dangerously tried to stall whenever I stopped accelerating and the revs returned to idle.
So today I collared my Dad for some mechanical support and did the following:
Cleaned up the pipes as there was a lot of carp and oil over them
Bled fuel filter
Tested fuel pump pressure from filter to a jar (seemed OK, filled half a coffee jar in under 5 secs)
Replaced fuel filter (just to be sure)
Replaced air filter
Raised idling speed (shouldn't have to do this as it hadn't been adjusted but the locking nut was loose)
I took her out for a short run and the Disco went fine. Picked up well, was smooth, sounded alright...for about 3 minutes, then when I drove down a series of short roads and turnings the old rubbishness returned. Almost stalling when coming off the juice to stop at a junction with hardly any low-down grunt to pull away and pulling my foot to the floor made no difference...but after 5 secs or so the engine struggled back up to normal idling speed and I could pull away.
When I got back we:
Checked all hoses for cracks
Check turbo actuator movement
Copper greased turbo actuator/wastegate linkage (just to be sure)
As I figured that the wastegate may be sticking open at points causing me to lose power. I took off the air filter to turbo hose which had a fair amount of skank and oil on the inside but the turbo itself luckily was pretty clean. I'm guessing that the crud is coming out of the small cylinder (EGR?) valve at the top/side of the rocker cover and passing along the smaller hose that goes across the engine to the air filter.
Rather than risk death by taking the Disco out for another run with it's stalling at a junction habit we were able to replicate the problem kinda by revving the engine up to about 4k rpm for a few seconds and as the engine slows down to idle it goes lumpy and tries not to stall for 4-5 seconds.
I'm completely stumped. There's no ECU/EDC to mess things up, it's all mechanical, right? So a flat battery shouldn't affect anything (it still goes flat if not used) at all? The fuel is coming out of the filter under what seems to be OK pressure and is pretty clean and the turbo actuator isn't sticking at all.
Help
I have an MR2 turbo so I roughly know how turbos work and I've had three Capris in the past which I used to service so I know roughly how engines work but diesels are a bit...odd...to me.
I have a problem though and it's got me pretty stumped.
When I bought the 200tdi it seemed fine, a bit of a boat compared to what I was used to but it pulled alright and got me home no probs. Then it sat on my driveway waiting to get used for a few months and (possibly due to an aftermarket alarm) the battery ran flat. I replaced the battery with a non-LR item and since then the Disco's just been, well, rubbish.
It had a very low and slightly rough idle when I took it out for a run a few weeks back and there was no power at all. It struggled to get over 30-40mph even with the go pedal flat to the floor and rather dangerously tried to stall whenever I stopped accelerating and the revs returned to idle.
So today I collared my Dad for some mechanical support and did the following:
Cleaned up the pipes as there was a lot of carp and oil over them
Bled fuel filter
Tested fuel pump pressure from filter to a jar (seemed OK, filled half a coffee jar in under 5 secs)
Replaced fuel filter (just to be sure)
Replaced air filter
Raised idling speed (shouldn't have to do this as it hadn't been adjusted but the locking nut was loose)
I took her out for a short run and the Disco went fine. Picked up well, was smooth, sounded alright...for about 3 minutes, then when I drove down a series of short roads and turnings the old rubbishness returned. Almost stalling when coming off the juice to stop at a junction with hardly any low-down grunt to pull away and pulling my foot to the floor made no difference...but after 5 secs or so the engine struggled back up to normal idling speed and I could pull away.
When I got back we:
Checked all hoses for cracks
Check turbo actuator movement
Copper greased turbo actuator/wastegate linkage (just to be sure)
As I figured that the wastegate may be sticking open at points causing me to lose power. I took off the air filter to turbo hose which had a fair amount of skank and oil on the inside but the turbo itself luckily was pretty clean. I'm guessing that the crud is coming out of the small cylinder (EGR?) valve at the top/side of the rocker cover and passing along the smaller hose that goes across the engine to the air filter.
Rather than risk death by taking the Disco out for another run with it's stalling at a junction habit we were able to replicate the problem kinda by revving the engine up to about 4k rpm for a few seconds and as the engine slows down to idle it goes lumpy and tries not to stall for 4-5 seconds.
I'm completely stumped. There's no ECU/EDC to mess things up, it's all mechanical, right? So a flat battery shouldn't affect anything (it still goes flat if not used) at all? The fuel is coming out of the filter under what seems to be OK pressure and is pretty clean and the turbo actuator isn't sticking at all.
Help