NZ Pablo
Member
Hi all. Since purchasing my D2 it's been 'sluggish'. I kind of assumed they were like that since I have limited experience with them! But I've read a lot on here about this sort of performance being related to the MAF sensor. So I took mine off, cleaned it with carb cleaner. Re installed it. Measured voltage to pins during idle (1v) and under load (maybe 4v). Which I think I remember is lower than it should be? But still something.
Yesterday I disconnected it and went for a drive. It seemed the same. Except different.
My wife in the passenger seat commented that the car seemed to be running 'smoother'! I think actually what she was noticing was the absence of clunky shifts from the auto gearbox (maybe a separate issue) but these disappear with the MAF disconnected resulting in a drive that 'feels smoother'.
I tried it in S mode and the clunky gear changing came back a little.
In summary, the cars performance seems mostly unchanged. Most people would not notice any difference. Implying my MAF sensor isn't doing anything. Except for the slightly smoother gear changing.
How could this be? Is the default mapping from the ECU a flatter response curve so that the gearbox doesnt have to change so frequently?
Does all this mean I should replace my MAF sensor?
Car is a stock 2004 TD5 Auto. No EGR messing about. Tyres factory size.
Yesterday I disconnected it and went for a drive. It seemed the same. Except different.
My wife in the passenger seat commented that the car seemed to be running 'smoother'! I think actually what she was noticing was the absence of clunky shifts from the auto gearbox (maybe a separate issue) but these disappear with the MAF disconnected resulting in a drive that 'feels smoother'.
I tried it in S mode and the clunky gear changing came back a little.
In summary, the cars performance seems mostly unchanged. Most people would not notice any difference. Implying my MAF sensor isn't doing anything. Except for the slightly smoother gear changing.
How could this be? Is the default mapping from the ECU a flatter response curve so that the gearbox doesnt have to change so frequently?
Does all this mean I should replace my MAF sensor?
Car is a stock 2004 TD5 Auto. No EGR messing about. Tyres factory size.
Last edited: