Duratorq Stalling problem
Discussion
Evening all,
I have use of a Fiesta in Spain and it’s a 1400 Duratorq engine. Great little car, but it stalls intermittently on low revs. Whilst I have checked out the forum for other questions like this I need a bit of help in sorting it - the weather in Spain is great, but the mechanics don't seem to be as pleasant! It’s been to Ford who claim to have checked for fault codes and have found none.
I see form another thread that the TDCi engine can stall if the engine dips below 750rpm and this seems like it could be the same fault. With the aircon on and I pull up at a junction it will stall 50% of the time, with the aircon off its more like 10%.
SO my questions are - Can I adjust the tickover revs of the car, or is it all computer based stuff?
and - Do you think the TDCi and duratorq engine work (or stall) in a similar way?
I have use of a Fiesta in Spain and it’s a 1400 Duratorq engine. Great little car, but it stalls intermittently on low revs. Whilst I have checked out the forum for other questions like this I need a bit of help in sorting it - the weather in Spain is great, but the mechanics don't seem to be as pleasant! It’s been to Ford who claim to have checked for fault codes and have found none.
I see form another thread that the TDCi engine can stall if the engine dips below 750rpm and this seems like it could be the same fault. With the aircon on and I pull up at a junction it will stall 50% of the time, with the aircon off its more like 10%.
SO my questions are - Can I adjust the tickover revs of the car, or is it all computer based stuff?
and - Do you think the TDCi and duratorq engine work (or stall) in a similar way?
AFAIK on modern Ford diesels (i.e. ones with dual mass flywheels) they design them to stall if the revs drop below a certain threshold, below which using more throttle has NO effect on what the engine does, it just cuts out. This is to prevent the dual mass flywheel resonating and shaking themselves to bits AFAIK. The solution is to make sure the revs don't drop too low when pulling away. HTH
Matthew-TMM said:
AFAIK on modern Ford diesels (i.e. ones with dual mass flywheels) they design them to stall if the revs drop below a certain threshold, below which using more throttle has NO effect on what the engine does, it just cuts out. This is to prevent the dual mass flywheel resonating and shaking themselves to bits AFAIK. The solution is to make sure the revs don't drop too low when pulling away. HTH
Yep,I have a company Mundano and as soon as the revs dip below about 800 the engine stops no matter what you do.It took a bit of getting used to and still catches me out every so often.....The daddy said:
I see where you are coming from, but its the engine dieing as I stop (or coast), not under load.
Weak or bent fingers on the diaphragm spring of the pressure plate?Maybe the clutch isn't disengaging from the flywheels?
Adjustment needed?
Edited by Trooper2 on Monday 21st May 22:09
Trooper2 said:
The daddy said:
I see where you are coming from, but its the engine dieing as I stop (or coast), not under load.
Weak or bent fingers on the diaphragm spring of the pressure plate?Maybe the clutch isn't disengaging from the flywheels?
Adjustment needed?
Edited by Trooper2 on Monday 21st May 22:09
Ah, ok. Dad's mentioned that occasionally his mondeo (petrol though) very rarely if he's been on overrun and then dips the clutch to change gear. A lot of modern engines cut the fuel under certain overrun conditions to save fuel and I think just occasionally he manages catches this out. However I think that's different to your problem by the sound of it.
I'd have thought the idle speed is controlled by the ECU and hence not adjustable.
I'd have thought the idle speed is controlled by the ECU and hence not adjustable.
Edited by Matthew-TMM on Monday 21st May 22:13
esselte said:
Matthew-TMM said:
AFAIK on modern Ford diesels (i.e. ones with dual mass flywheels) they design them to stall if the revs drop below a certain threshold, below which using more throttle has NO effect on what the engine does, it just cuts out. This is to prevent the dual mass flywheel resonating and shaking themselves to bits AFAIK. The solution is to make sure the revs don't drop too low when pulling away. HTH
Yep,I have a company Mundano and as soon as the revs dip below about 800 the engine stops no matter what you do.It took a bit of getting used to and still catches me out every so often.....So, when you are cruising along and take your foot of the throttle the revs drop down briefly, before the stepper motor has chance to react and drag them back up again. Sometimes it can die completely.
Anyway, a squirt of WD40 around all the throttle/motor/adjuster bits solved the problem

Find a forum that deals with such cars, and ask there.
Surprisingly there are several big fan clubs for Rover 820's, for some reason I can't fathom

King Herald said:
esselte said:
Matthew-TMM said:
AFAIK on modern Ford diesels (i.e. ones with dual mass flywheels) they design them to stall if the revs drop below a certain threshold, below which using more throttle has NO effect on what the engine does, it just cuts out. This is to prevent the dual mass flywheel resonating and shaking themselves to bits AFAIK. The solution is to make sure the revs don't drop too low when pulling away. HTH
Yep,I have a company Mundano and as soon as the revs dip below about 800 the engine stops no matter what you do.It took a bit of getting used to and still catches me out every so often.....So, when you are cruising along and take your foot of the throttle the revs drop down briefly, before the stepper motor has chance to react and drag them back up again. Sometimes it can die completely.
Anyway, a squirt of WD40 around all the throttle/motor/adjuster bits solved the problem

Find a forum that deals with such cars, and ask there.
Surprisingly there are several big fan clubs for Rover 820's, for some reason I can't fathom

The daddy said:
Trooper2 said:
The daddy said:
I see where you are coming from, but its the engine dieing as I stop (or coast), not under load.
Weak or bent fingers on the diaphragm spring of the pressure plate?Maybe the clutch isn't disengaging from the flywheels?
Adjustment needed?
Edited by Trooper2 on Monday 21st May 22:09
Trooper2 said:
King Herald said:
esselte said:
Matthew-TMM said:
AFAIK on modern Ford diesels (i.e. ones with dual mass flywheels) they design them to stall if the revs drop below a certain threshold, below which using more throttle has NO effect on what the engine does, it just cuts out. This is to prevent the dual mass flywheel resonating and shaking themselves to bits AFAIK. The solution is to make sure the revs don't drop too low when pulling away. HTH
Yep,I have a company Mundano and as soon as the revs dip below about 800 the engine stops no matter what you do.It took a bit of getting used to and still catches me out every so often.....
Find a forum that deals with such cars, and ask there.
Surprisingly there are several big fan clubs for Rover 820's, for some reason I can't fathom

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