Emissions

Emissions

Author
Discussion

colin mee

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

121 months

Wednesday 24th April
quotequote all
Hello all.just had a call from the mot garage they day my emissions are just over. Anyone have any ideas how the bring them down.

rev-erend

21,421 posts

285 months

Wednesday 24th April
quotequote all
New set of spark plugs.

Trim the co on the air flow meter.

colin mee

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

121 months

Wednesday 24th April
quotequote all
Done the plugs. How do I do the meter

SLB

256 posts

242 months

Wednesday 24th April
quotequote all
You could try raising the idle a touch, particularly if you have a racier cam.

rev-erend

21,421 posts

285 months

Wednesday 24th April
quotequote all
I think some airflow meters have a idle trim screw. What afm do you have?

Do you have a co2 meter?

colin mee

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

121 months

Wednesday 24th April
quotequote all
Will get a photo

colin mee

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

121 months

Wednesday 24th April
quotequote all
Can't,see a screw

BlueWedgy

383 posts

103 months

Wednesday 24th April
quotequote all
If It's a V8 is it not the mixture screw. Sorry poor picture gleened off here (RIP), still helping folks out.
http://www.vintagemodelairplane.com/pages/Rover_Te...

And this about page 15....

http://www.vintagemodelairplane.com/pages/Download...




Edited by BlueWedgy on Wednesday 24th April 19:31

Adrian@

4,314 posts

283 months

Wednesday 24th April
quotequote all
TBH, there is a reality check here ..take it to a different MOT station next time. A@

Edited by Adrian@ on Wednesday 24th April 19:39

colin mee

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

121 months

Wednesday 24th April
quotequote all
Think I will next time.only a few more mots

rev-erend

21,421 posts

285 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all
Also, if its failed an emissions test it could indicate that something is not right.

Some potential areas to investigate:

Plug leads
Dizzy cap and rotor arm
Fuel injectors
Fuel filter
Throttle position sensor
Air flow sensor issues
Wiring issues



Edited by rev-erend on Thursday 25th April 17:35

Wedg1e

26,805 posts

266 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all
I find turning the fuel pressure down a bit for the duration of the test helps... then wind it back up afterwards.
A standard 3.5 probably won't have an adjustable regulator though.

mrzigazaga

18,560 posts

166 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all
Adrian@ said:
TBH, there is a reality check here ..take it to a different MOT station next time. A@

Edited by Adrian@ on Wednesday 24th April 19:39
+1...or drive it about for 20 minutes before you take it there..

RSTurboPaul

10,401 posts

259 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all
mrzigazaga said:
Adrian@ said:
TBH, there is a reality check here ..take it to a different MOT station next time. A@

Edited by Adrian@ on Wednesday 24th April 19:39
+1...or drive it about for 20 minutes before you take it there..
Italian tune-up using decent fuel, arrive red-hot tongue out

rev-erend

21,421 posts

285 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all
What we're the values given to you for the fail.

From memory, I think co2 is a very generous 1% and is fairly easy to get under in a wedge but If you have an issue then it fails.

I also used to make sure I had changed the oil and filter before the test as every little helps.

colin mee

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

121 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all

mrzigazaga

18,560 posts

166 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all
How old are your spark plugs? having the right plugs make a difference, my old 350i gradually began to overfuel but over a couple of years, I do recall Mr King taking the mixture down a tad on the AFM to the acceptable level.

colin mee

Original Poster:

1,193 posts

121 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all
Plugs and leads are about 6 months.

Wedg1e

26,805 posts

266 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all
CO (not CO2!) on cars that age is 3.5% as shown above; I used to have a Gunsons gas analyser and checked mine pre-MOT. However after some years where the car seemed to pass without needing any adjustment I realised I hadn't seen the analyser in a long time and despite a major ransack it has failed to appear. I suspect I loaned it to a forum member who has omitted to return it, as nobody else I know would have had any need of it. Chances of them spotting this reminder: slim whistle

Crankcase breathers and the like can also be a cause of high hydrocarbons (as in the OP's case), worth a good washout/ blow-through as appropriate.

Englishman

2,220 posts

211 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all
It has failed on HC, not CO from the picture. Usually means too much fuel in the exhaust. Was the engine hot? Wedges do over-fuel when cold. Otherwise I would make sure you have a spark at all plugs as if one or more plug is not firing that can cause the issue too.