Asthmatic 350z
Author
Discussion

_Al_

Original Poster:

5,618 posts

280 months

Sunday 19th February 2012
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I had time off last week and took my MR2 to Surrey Rolling Road. Charlie was his usual excellent self and our whole group had a great day.

While I was delighted at breaking the 250bhp barrier on an essentially bone-stock MR2 Rev 3, unfortunately not all the cars covered themselves in glory.

Probably the biggest surprise of the day was my mate's 350z. It's a UK car, low mileage, 2004, GT Spec with full Nissan service history. The car wants for nothing and it was only about 3 weeks ago that it was freshly serviced and received a brand new Nissan exhaust (mid and back box) in time for the MOT.





Charlie said he'd never seen one deliver less power. The average for standard cars is around 265-270 on his rollers. He gave my mate some contact details for people who'd look into it, but I figured it'd be helpful if I stuck the graphs up here and let the combined wisdom of PH have a think about it.

The car is mostly used for motorway work on weekends as he commutes by train. I thought that'd be ideal for keeping it healthy as it gets properly warm every time it gets driven?

Any thoughts?

ScoobieWRX

4,863 posts

248 months

Sunday 19th February 2012
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It all starts off well enough and fueling richens to c.12.5 at 3200rpm where it should be, then it shoots up to c.13.4 and is all over the place till it settles down again to c.12.3 at 5800rpm which is more or less where he is making peak power.

In between 3200 and 5800rpm fueling is running way too lean for a proper pull, and all over the place too. From the point where it started off well at 3200rpm it should have been a fairly flat line hovering around 12.2-12.5AFR on a wide open throttle (WOT) right the way through this pull.

12.5AFR is where petrol delivers max power and with a normally aspirated car that is where you should be looking to run fueling when you're on it.

I'd like to know what timing it's running all the way through this pull.

Either the throttle pedal wasn't 100% wide open throttle(WOT) and was lifted during this pull or it may be an issue with either MAF sensor or Lambda sensor, or both, as there is something not quite right there.

_Al_

Original Poster:

5,618 posts

280 months

Sunday 19th February 2012
quotequote all
Thanks for your reply Francis.

They did three runs on WOT which returned near-identical results so we can probably rule out operator error.

I'll have a google and see if there is any way of checking for error codes on a 350 without handing it over to Nissan.

ScoobieWRX

4,863 posts

248 months

Sunday 19th February 2012
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The problem with MAF sensors is they rarely give you an error code when they start failing.

The way it normally works is as they get worse they read less and less airflow fooling the ECU into thinking it needs to run less fueling therefore it runs leaner and leaner.

Lambda sensors normally give up the ghost completely and then throw an error code. Also with OBD equipment a dead lambda sensor shows no AFR readings at all. It's not often they go the same way as MAF sensors with erroneous readings over an extended period of time. 9/10 times they just die.

If you have no error code for the Lambda sensor i'd be looking at the MAF sensor. Maybe it just needs a good clean, maybe it's faulty.

ETA a cheap OBD diagnostic reader off fleabay will read error codes and reset the ECU for code clearing.

Baryonyx

18,214 posts

181 months

Monday 20th February 2012
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Glad to hear your MR2 impressed on the rolling road, shame about your mate's Nissan! Still, better to find out that the car has an issue, even if you have to find out this way.

liner33

10,861 posts

224 months

Monday 20th February 2012
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I hope Jez at Horsham developments is one of the names your were given , he knows his 350's

_Al_

Original Poster:

5,618 posts

280 months

Monday 20th February 2012
quotequote all
I'd have to ask who they recommended - I was off sorting out other MR2s at that point.

I had no idea how cheap OBD2 readers have got! Is there a minimum to spend before you get a workable one or will one if the £20 jobs work every bit as well?

ScoobieWRX

4,863 posts

248 months

Monday 20th February 2012
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Something between £20-£30 will do the job. Most of them read live data too.

I'll give you an example of how cheap. I've got a Bluetooth enabled OBD2/EOBD reader that's paired to my HTC Flyer 3G. Works well enough for clearing codes and seeing live data. I paid less than £15 for it and small enough to carry around in the car glove box or in my pocket.

I've got other kit that cost a lot more and runs on my laptop with cable etc... Both of these i use for European and other compliant Jap vehicles depending on where i am and what i'm doing.

Vixpy1

42,695 posts

286 months

Monday 20th February 2012
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Thats the standard fueling curve of a 350Z Francis

ScoobieWRX

4,863 posts

248 months

Monday 20th February 2012
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I have to say i wouldn't have expected quite such a deviation from rich to lean and then back again on a wide open throttle between 2500-4200rpm if it was running 100%. It's normally aspirated so i expect there to be a lot less deviation and a more linear fuelling curve.

I'd of expected the fuelling to start off lean at 13.0AFR then gradually slope down with little variation up and down till it hits peak power at 12.3AFR, if it was fuelling properly.

If the car is 30+ bhp down on what the manufacturer quotes either the manufacturer is a liar or there's something not quite right with the car wouldn't you say.

Vixpy1

42,695 posts

286 months

Monday 20th February 2012
quotequote all
ScoobieWRX said:
I have to say i wouldn't have expected quite such a deviation from rich to lean and then back again on a wide open throttle between 2500-4200rpm if it was running 100%. It's normally aspirated so i expect there to be a lot less deviation and a more linear fuelling curve.

I'd of expected the fuelling to start off lean at 13.0AFR then gradually slope down with little variation up and down till it hits peak power at 12.3AFR, if it was fuelling properly.

If the car is 30+ bhp down on what the manufacturer quotes either the manufacturer is a liar or there's something not quite right with the car wouldn't you say.
I know there is something wrong with the car, as its the lowest one i've ever done, I've also done enough of these to know what the standard car's fueling curve looks like!

liner33

10,861 posts

224 months

Monday 20th February 2012
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I bet you have seen some worse stock fuel curves that that as well!!

Vixpy1

42,695 posts

286 months

Monday 20th February 2012
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yes I recomended the Chap visit Jez at H-Dev, he does alot of work with these.

Mr MXT

7,774 posts

305 months

Monday 20th February 2012
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I know the car and the owner that the OP is referring to and the way it is driven.

Is there any evidence to suggest "the italian tune up" actually produces results? The car is never, ever, driven hard.

(P.S. Al - first dibs if he ever wants to sell it)

ScoobieWRX

4,863 posts

248 months

Monday 20th February 2012
quotequote all
Vixpy1 said:
I know there is something wrong with the car, as its the lowest one i've ever done, I've also done enough of these to know what the standard car's fueling curve looks like!
Fair enough smile

Baryonyx

18,214 posts

181 months

Monday 20th February 2012
quotequote all
ScoobieWRX said:
If the car is 30+ bhp down on what the manufacturer quotes either the manufacturer is a liar or there's something not quite right with the car wouldn't you say.
Well, that wouldn't be that unusual! I recall Mountune saying that they had never seen a factory stock mk2 Focus RS making more than 269hp when it came to them! A good 30bhp down on what Ford quote!

Vixpy1

42,695 posts

286 months

Monday 20th February 2012
quotequote all
Baryonyx said:
ScoobieWRX said:
If the car is 30+ bhp down on what the manufacturer quotes either the manufacturer is a liar or there's something not quite right with the car wouldn't you say.
Well, that wouldn't be that unusual! I recall Mountune saying that they had never seen a factory stock mk2 Focus RS making more than 269hp when it came to them! A good 30bhp down on what Ford quote!
Most i do seem to make 285bhp to 300bhp

_Al_

Original Poster:

5,618 posts

280 months

Monday 20th February 2012
quotequote all
Mr MXT said:
I know the car and the owner that the OP is referring to and the way it is driven.

Is there any evidence to suggest "the italian tune up" actually produces results? The car is never, ever, driven hard.

(P.S. Al - first dibs if he ever wants to sell it)
I'm interested to hear what everyone thinks about this. Could a good thrash unblock its lungs a bit? Russ speaks the truth. I'm honestly not sure it's ever been over 4,000rpm. Certainly not for more than a few seconds.

P.s. You can have SECOND dibs. I'm quite taken by it myself.... smile

Mastodon2

14,145 posts

187 months

Monday 20th February 2012
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Vixpy1 said:
Most i do seem to make 285bhp to 300bhp
Indeed, I've read and heard (though have not owned and dyno'd one myself) that the RS MK2 is a consistent under-performer, making anywhere from 265-280bhp. I suppose Ford had a real battle on their hands to convince people that it was a real jump up from the competition and yet still suffered the horrendous fuel consumption issues that plagued the ST, so had to strike a happy mid-point. Underpowered from the factory but probably up on the MPG, CO2 output and engine longevity fronts.. There is a price to be paid for the extra cylinder I suppose, but the way they gulp fuel is shocking.

Vixpy1

42,695 posts

286 months

Monday 20th February 2012
quotequote all
Mastodon2 said:
Vixpy1 said:
Most i do seem to make 285bhp to 300bhp
Indeed, I've read and heard (though have not owned and dyno'd one myself) that the RS MK2 is a consistent under-performer, making anywhere from 265-280bhp. I suppose Ford had a real battle on their hands to convince people that it was a real jump up from the competition and yet still suffered the horrendous fuel consumption issues that plagued the ST, so had to strike a happy mid-point. Underpowered from the factory but probably up on the MPG, CO2 output and engine longevity fronts.. There is a price to be paid for the extra cylinder I suppose, but the way they gulp fuel is shocking.
I've done a few modified ones now at 400bhp +, still on standard turbo