Griff won t start when hot.

Griff won t start when hot.

Author
Discussion

broscombe

Original Poster:

10 posts

260 months

Wednesday 20th November 2002
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my 4.3 big valve grif k reg some times will not start when it is hot. eg if I stall at traffic lights, I have to wait for about 4/5 minutes for it to cool then its ok, any ideas???

>>> Edited by broscombe on Sunday 24th November 11:57

craigalsop

1,991 posts

269 months

Wednesday 20th November 2002
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Common problem - usually heat damage to the starter motor, which will slowly get worse....If it's this, then get a new starter motor & put a heatshield on it.
Use the search facility, there should be lots of threads that discuss this.

beano1197

20,854 posts

276 months

Wednesday 20th November 2002
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Known problem on early 500s was that the starter motor wasn't up to the job when hot - symptoms as you describe.

(I had a new one when I bought the car and no problems with the replacement - it was one of a series of things that unfortunately cropped up on the couple of test drives I had - all down to non-use by previous owners.)

david beer

3,982 posts

268 months

Thursday 21st November 2002
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Heat shield can stop the problem but if not it is still needed for future protection. Seems to be about 60% cure so worth a go!

siwes

347 posts

260 months

Friday 22nd November 2002
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posted much the same topic a few months ago the engine cranks ok but will not start when hot tried everything so has Blackpool no change , the car is back there nearly a year later hopefully they will sort it this time Ill let you know in about 3 weeks
regards Si

apache

39,731 posts

285 months

Friday 22nd November 2002
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sounds like fuel starvation, but don't see how this heat would cause this, do you get a healthy spark and good fuel pressure?

david beer

3,982 posts

268 months

Friday 22nd November 2002
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I think we are seeing two problems here. If the starter doesnt turn, then could be heat damaged starter.But if its turning over but not firing, different story. Iam sure somebody will confirm but is there not a fuel temperature sensor? Also my Griff sometimes will not fire if i hold onto the cranking,if i do just a short turn over, away we go. Maybe ignition switch.

d_drinks

1,426 posts

270 months

Friday 22nd November 2002
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Could be either as the other posts have said heat killing the starter motor – heat shield will help reduce this. Or it could be due to fuel percolation (don’t laugh but the old Renault 5 Turbo used to have an anti-percolation fan that ran after the engine was switched off to stop the fuel evaporating from the carb) The Tuscan Challenge cars have this happen sometimes, if you spin off the engine heat won’t allow the car to restart, you either wait for it to cool down or get a set of jumper leads plugged in. I think that CDL use to batteries in their cars to help stop this happening - though not that Steve or David seem to see much of the scenery !!

shpub

8,507 posts

273 months

Friday 22nd November 2002
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Frst thing is the GRiff does not have carbs... normally. Unless someone has fitted them.

If the car won't start (but engine turns over) when hot then this could be down to almost anything in the injection and ignition system. Possible candidates are ignition module, coil, dizzy sensor, ECU, any of the injection sensors and so on. The immobiliser can also play up.

The problem is that unless the car can be made to demo the fault it is very difficult to fault find as by the time you check the faulty bit, it has cooled down and behaves itself.

This type of fault can be very difficult to track down. You have my deepest sympathy.

Steve
www.tvrbooks.co.uk

cutmonster

255 posts

271 months

Friday 22nd November 2002
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Not sure how effective heat shielding the starter motor really is: surely most of the heat is conducted to the motor along from where it is clamped to the car. David Batty v. sceptical about shielding and suggests replacement motor. I have had "cooking" problems with my motor when hot and must replace it in due course. But will shielding make a difference?
Steve: any thoughts in your experience?

>> Edited by cutmonster on Friday 22 November 13:18

shpub

8,507 posts

273 months

Friday 22nd November 2002
quotequote all
Good idea basically. It does seem to help and costs so little. Rally design sell the shielding for around £5 so it is not expensive to do. Many specialists are now fitting it as a matter of course when replacing the starter.

I should say that in most cases when the motor is failing, it is too late and the motor need some TLC and then fitting the shield will prolong its life after it has been repaired. It may cure the problem in marginal situations but that is rare. BTW the manifolds that go past the motor reach 600-800F and that is a lot hotter than the bell housing gets by a long long way. .

Steve

>> Edited by shpub on Friday 22 November 13:29

GreenV8S

30,209 posts

285 months

Friday 22nd November 2002
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david beer said: I think we are seeing two problems here. If the starter doesnt turn, then could be heat damaged starter.But if its turning over but not firing, different story. Iam sure somebody will confirm but is there not a fuel temperature sensor? Also my Griff sometimes will not fire if i hold onto the cranking,if i do just a short turn over, away we go. Maybe ignition switch.


The battery voltage drops while you're cranking the engine over. To compensate for this, the coil is normally powered through a ballast resister that drops the voltage to about 9 volts, and this is bypassed while the engine is cranking so the coil sees 10-11 volts i.e. more that usual, not less, while the engine is cranking.

If you had an under-spec battery, or a poor earth or main power connection, you could be getting an unusually high voltage drop while cranking which is causing a weak spark. Alternatively, the ballast short circuit may not be working. Either way could lead to the symptoms you described i.e. engine won't fire until the moment you stop cranking it. You could check for this by putting a spark trace (passive strobe) in the HT king lead and seeing how the spark strength varies. It should get stronger while cranking, not weaker.

Hope this helps,
Peter Humphries (and a green V8S)

beano1197

20,854 posts

276 months

Friday 22nd November 2002
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david beer said: I think we are seeing two problems here. If the starter doesnt turn, then could be heat damaged starter.But if its turning over but not firing, different story. Iam sure somebody will confirm but is there not a fuel temperature sensor? Also my Griff sometimes will not fire if i hold onto the cranking,if i do just a short turn over, away we go. Maybe ignition switch.


Course if the starter motor is turning, but it is not starting, it's down to fuel or spark.

I recently had a no spark situation which was the start of either the coil or the ignition booster breaking down. (Replaced both c£60 for the parts.) This was an embarassing one because having got trailered all the way to The Garage, it turned out it wanted to spark! Doh!!!

I am not aware that TVRs are prone to fuel vaporisation, but some cars are (I remember a Spitfire many years back where a garage decided that a heat shield was falling off and was superfluous - course it was well enough to drive of the forecourt and enough yards down the road for them to have locked up!!!)

david beer

3,982 posts

268 months

Friday 22nd November 2002
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Wow £5 for a shield, thats "cheap as chips". I wont buy my next batch in then!

d_drinks

1,426 posts

270 months

Friday 22nd November 2002
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shpub said: Frst thing is the GRiff does not have carbs... normally. Unless someone has fitted them.
Steve



Steve i wasn't trying to say they do have carbs, only that the Renault 5 did hence the fan.

david beer

3,982 posts

268 months

Saturday 23rd November 2002
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Steve, where are Rally design? Sounds like everybody should know at that price.

greenv8s

30,209 posts

285 months

Saturday 23rd November 2002
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david beer said: Steve, where are Rally design? Sounds like everybody should know at that price.



Faversham, Kent.

broscombe

Original Poster:

10 posts

260 months

Sunday 24th November 2002
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Thanks for all your advice, perhaps i should have made myself a bit clearer, the engine turns over fine but just will not start if i leave the car for 3 to 4 mins when hot.
I then have to wait another 4 to 5 mins until the engine cool down enough to start. I intend to hill climb this car in the new season so i must cure it,also at petrol stations it tends to get a bit embarassing.Any further help would be much appreciated.

greenv8s

30,209 posts

285 months

Sunday 24th November 2002
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broscombe said: Thanks for all your advice, perhaps i should have made myself a bit clearer, the engine turns over fine but just will not start if i leave the car for 3 to 4 mins when hot.
I then have to wait another 4 to 5 mins until the engine cool down enough to start. I intend to hill climb this car in the new season so i must cure it,also at petrol stations it tends to get a bit embarassing.Any further help would be much appreciated.


Does it idle but not start? Could be fuel evaporation n the fuel rail or a faulty coil or something like that. You can use a passive strobe to check what's happening with the ignition. If it's an ignition glitch, try wrapping a bag of frozen peas round the coil for a couple of minutes, if that cures it it is probably the coil breaking down. If it's fuel evaporation, you can lag the fuel rails to cure this. In theory, running the fuel pump for thirty seconds or so would probably flush the fuel rail out and coll it down, but of course it only runs for five seconds each time you switch on. Opening the bonnet will speed the process up too.

Cheers,
Peter Humphries (and a green V8S)
Hillclimbing where, by the way?

broscombe

Original Poster:

10 posts

260 months

Monday 25th November 2002
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Speed Hillclimbing at Harewood hillclimb, yorkshire
did last season in my Taimar now need to go quicker so got griff.