More GT woes, severe loss of power.
More GT woes, severe loss of power.
Author
Discussion

( =Jamie= )

Original Poster:

24 posts

199 months

Wednesday 30th December 2009
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Hey all, got problems with my gt. Low down i get hardly any power what so ever. My foots at the floor and nothing happens. Need to dip the clutch and build the revs right up in order to get going. The car sort of chugs along, no strange noises or bangs. Desperately need a diagnosis as i start work again soon frown

RicksAlfas

14,278 posts

266 months

Thursday 31st December 2009
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May well be the air flow meter. Try disconnecting it and running with it like that.
You'll find it just upstream of the air filter plugged into the air trunking.

exgtt

2,067 posts

234 months

Thursday 31st December 2009
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Seconded, when the afm gave up on my 156 it would not rev past 5k. Easy to change but I think there about £140. stay away from the cheapies on eBay, some work, the majority don't seem to.

It's a Bosch part, unreliable German rubbish lol.

Ps check the rubber pipe from the air box to the throttle butterfly for splits. Common and robs you of hp!

( =Jamie= )

Original Poster:

24 posts

199 months

Friday 1st January 2010
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Thanks very much guys for all of your help, i'll check that out and hopefully that'll be it.

( =Jamie= )

Original Poster:

24 posts

199 months

Saturday 2nd January 2010
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Gona have o go at changing the air flow meter. Not very competent so asking for a bit of guidance on the DIY front. Where abouts do i start??

Robert060379

15,754 posts

205 months

Sunday 3rd January 2010
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Or a censored intercooler. Had the same problem with my Phase II Uno Turbo.

AlfaManc

267 posts

193 months

Sunday 3rd January 2010
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On my 166, the air flow meter is a black cylindrical object (made by Bosch), and it is attached by some flexible piping, to the top of the casing that holds the air filter. The casing holding the air filter is a big black box that sits behind the headlight but quite low down in the engine bay on the passenger side. You'll need to undo some clips at both ends of the meter, and the piping attached to both ends of the flow meter should pull off. Replace this with the new one, re-attach the piping and you should be done.

I think my 156 had a similar arrangement, so I am guessing these instructions can't be too far out for a GT (same engine as 156).

There is a pic of the air flow meter on

http://www.alfaworkshop.co.uk/air_flow_meter.shtml

All the best.

( =Jamie= )

Original Poster:

24 posts

199 months

Monday 4th January 2010
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Good link mate, really helped. Thanks

TUCKER T

50 posts

223 months

Thursday 7th January 2010
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The symptoms of the car do seem to be as descibed like the meter but i went to have a quick look too see what i thought and found that the car now doesnt start, could this meter cause this? if its a case of changing that then its cured thats fine, but if not then there may be something else wrong??


When trying to start, the car coffs and splurts and wont idle at all, could this sensor or meter be broken or faulty in such a way that the car will no longer start?


cheers

RicksAlfas

14,278 posts

266 months

Friday 8th January 2010
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TUCKER T said:
The symptoms of the car do seem to be as descibed like the meter but i went to have a quick look too see what i thought and found that the car now doesnt start, could this meter cause this? if its a case of changing that then its cured thats fine, but if not then there may be something else wrong??


When trying to start, the car coffs and splurts and wont idle at all, could this sensor or meter be broken or faulty in such a way that the car will no longer start?


cheers
Sounds extreme, but it could be the AFM.
Just try unplugging the connection to the AFM and try it then. The engine should just run at a default safe setting.