EFI Error warning

EFI Error warning

Author
Discussion

MattB

Original Poster:

3 posts

271 months

Friday 4th April 2003
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Hi All,
My Dec 2002 car with 2k miles on it has started hunting at idle and it comes up with EFI Error on the Dash Pod. Does anyone know what this means? I have had it back to the dealers and they can find no fault with it. Any Ideas?
Thanks
Matt B

lady topaz

3,855 posts

268 months

Friday 4th April 2003
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Same as mine Sept 2002 model. Switch on engine needed replacing. Dealer not surprised as this is a common prob. Didnt mean anything wrong apart from switch. Had idle adj, everything sweet now.

qualityscrew

503 posts

277 months

Friday 4th April 2003
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As far as I'm concerned during 24k miles, I have had 'EFI warning' a few times - while at high altitude crossing the alps and in torrential rain - it usually clears once conditions become 'normal' again.
'EFI FAULT' is apparently due to starting the car with your foot on the accelerator pedal - and results in a trip to the dealers to plug-in their lap top and do a 'reset'. The 'approved' starting proceedure is, I'm reliably informed: Do not touch accelerator until engine starts - you can then 'step-into the throttle'.
You will not stop the 'warning' until the dash has been re-set.

andyvdg

1,537 posts

297 months

Friday 4th April 2003
quotequote all
EFI fault is caused by a number of things. I haven't heard about "the foot on pedal whilst starting" before. Normally it indicates a dodgy sensor reading. It's supposed to catch the engine running incorrectly, but the most common reason is that water (from rain / washing) causes the sensor to be read incorrectly. If the car is running OK, you should be OK, just check it goes away when it dries out.

Earlier software you can't reset the warning until the problem goes away (I think you may have to restart the engine). Later software you can just press the rtk and it goes away.

Cheers,

Andy.

tony mac

3,474 posts

271 months

Friday 4th April 2003
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andy dvg you have mail

MattB

Original Poster:

3 posts

271 months

Saturday 5th April 2003
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Thanks All for the above. I think mine may be caused by the engine not running properly. When I restart if it is allready ward it idles very high. Will pay another trip to the dealers.
Cheers

lady topaz

3,855 posts

268 months

Monday 7th April 2003
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After having a new switch on engine 2 wks ago, the last few days EFI warning light back again - today started it up and had to overide it 3 times even before take off!!! grrrrrr - back to dealer. I will quiz them in more detail and post answer here.

>> Edited by lady topaz on Monday 7th April 21:48

lady topaz

3,855 posts

268 months

Wednesday 9th April 2003
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As often have to tickle throttle to 'hold' idle until warmed up a bit, asked dealer if that's why EFI?? Was asked if I got another code with the EFI code, before he could advise problem. He didn't think reason anything to do with tickling throttle to start but suggested before starting engine I should depress throttle half way, once and then release peddle, then turn key and start. He explained it is a way of simulating 'auto choke' - shouldn't need to tickle throttle then.

>> Edited by lady topaz on Wednesday 9th April 10:17

ghosty o'shark

184 posts

274 months

Wednesday 9th April 2003
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When I had the EFI warning my dealer had kittens and insisted that it should be put on a truck and sent over for examination. The basis for this was that the worst case scenario would be a fuel mix issue which could potentially pass unburnt fuel through the catalysts, rendering them useless. This would have been very costly to fix. As it was, the engine was not running as smoothly as it should, an issue they fixed and no warning light since. Its fair to say they checked for all the usual causes before the truck suggestion, ie has the car got wet etc. They also said if it ever comes on again I should stop the car and get it on the truck, it could be something very minor or very major.

Telboy

25 posts

268 months

Sunday 13th April 2003
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Just got back from a 2 hour jaunt roaund the lakes including a mix of fast/slow driving (darn these tourists). Anyhow after a brief stop at a friends EFI warning came on when I restarted the car - no rain here for ages so can't be moisture. Keeps reappearing every time I restart too - engine seems to be running smoothly enough, no misfires and pulls cleanly. Will this just disappear and reset itself or do I have to manually reset the pod? Mines an early 2001 model...

APMAUTO

368 posts

280 months

Sunday 13th April 2003
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lady topaz said: As often have to tickle throttle to 'hold' idle until warmed up a bit, asked dealer if that's why EFI?? Was asked if I got another code with the EFI code, before he could advise problem. He didn't think reason anything to do with tickling throttle to start but suggested before starting engine I should depress throttle half way, once and then release peddle, then turn key and start. He explained it is a way of simulating 'auto choke' - shouldn't need to tickle throttle then.

>> Edited by lady topaz on Wednesday 9th April 10:17


pressing throttle down to bring on auto choke on a carbed engine maybe not on a tuscan most likley cause is a sensor on the engine not making a good connection my guess would be the coolant sensor as this is the one that gives me the most problems due to getting wet whenever customers wash their cars or it rains, there is a simple cure though electrical grease on the connector

lady topaz

3,855 posts

268 months

Monday 14th April 2003
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Ahhh! Maybe the EFI faults I was getting could be the lead up to the bigger prob with my fan now - see 'bath time' thread - it all seems to tie in now!

Tusker

88 posts

254 months

Friday 23rd April 2004
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These EFI warnings buzzed up for the first time yesterday in my 3-week Tuscan ownership (2001 Y), about every 5 minutes, combined with ocassional diagnostic codes C & L.
My dealer (Gorners) have instructed me not to drive and return it to base on a truck pretty sharpish for diagnosis.
All on the nicest weekend of the year to date. No roof-off grinning for me then.

tuscan_thunder

1,763 posts

260 months

Friday 23rd April 2004
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EFI sometimes flashes up at random for a second or two and then disappears.

when the temp. sensor was playing up, and thus dumping fuel into the engine (was running as though the car was stone cold so basically like driving with choke out) EFI fault was regular. When this happened the car wouldn't pull. Could pull out to overtake, open the throttle and it would just die, and sit at a horribly uneven idle.

I wouldn't worry TOO much if it just flashes up and then disappears. EFI gives you a pretty spot-on mixture the majority of the time. Carbs only give you the right mixture a tiny percentage of the time and it doesn't cause too many problems.

If it happens a lot and if it comes on and stays on I would start to worry and think about detonation which could lead to valve and catalyst problems.

Tusker

88 posts

254 months

Friday 23rd April 2004
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The EFI warning and buzz combination would only disappear upon manually pressing the reset, & then re-appear a couple of miles down the road during random drive conditions.
After reading some of the excellent threads on this site with varying diagnoses, I thought I'd better tinkle Gorners rather than dismiss as a quirk.
Will post an update when car is returned on the truck (not by the YTS lads), as dealer too far away to collect myself.

Graham66

850 posts

298 months

Monday 26th April 2004
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On the older style pods the error would clear itself, none of this pressing buttons

If you over fill the fuel tank (i.e. any more than filling until the fuel filler clicks off) then you *can* get excess fuel going down the small overflow pipe that runs down the side of the filler in the boot - this pipe syphons the excess fuel to the carbon cannister in the front wing, which, in turn, dumps the excess fuel in to the inlet system during normal running of the car - are you still with me? - and this *can* cause the EFI warning to come up as the lambder sensors detect the excess fuel being added, the mixture is trimmed back to compensate, the excess fuel is no longer added and then the lambdas complain of too little fule - and the EFI gets a bit upset!

If this is the case, then it is only a temporary thing and should clear up after a little while

In any case, it is best to get the dealer to check it to be sure - just hope it is a nice easy fix

Graham

Tusker

88 posts

254 months

Tuesday 27th April 2004
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Thanks Graham.

The Tusk was RAC recovered yesterday morning back to the pits, after only 3 weeks of ownership.

The whole street had that knowing nodding smile, assuming it was a re-po job.

Not heard a squeak from the dealers since as to cause of problem. Presume you have to keep calling them, not the other way around?

Perhaps the car never arrived?