I’m trying to get my impoverished daughter’s car back into shape after lengthy neglect. She is unable to work due to some disabilities (some legit, some self induced) so is literally penniless. Things are looking up a bit right now and she is making some better choices. She is accepted into a highly recommended program for bi-polar/drug addictive people (it is in Nebraska) and I’ll be driving her car to Nebraska while my wife follows in ours. I sure don’t want to travel across I-80 at this time of year unless I fix the problem the Taurus has.
The car is a 2000 Taurus SE with the dual overhead cam engine, 111,000 miles. After driving it back from California (about 800 miles) I attempted to repair a troublesome misfire (in spite of the problem I got 28. 5 mpg for the trip). In addition to an oil and filter change, within the last 75 miles I have installed the following with no change in operation:
Fuel filter
Spark plugs
Air filter
EGR valve and gasket
Repaired crankcase ventilation connections
Injector cleaner added for the last 700 miles of driving (added to four tanks of gas)
Two bottles of Heet added to the present tank of gas
I cannot see any vacuum lines that are bad. To test for vacuum leaks I used my propane torch (unlit of course) to see if the engine speed changed as the gas was discharged near the manifold and vacuum lines. No change in speed.
Here are the symptoms. With engine warm and idling, miss is evident at the tailpipe. Underway with either very light throttle or after a slight downgrade, when the gas pedal is slowly pressed the engine misses badly and shudders. I live a few hundred feet above the city and the car runs so rough that it has a hard time making the climb. I took it out on the highway today and there seems to be no problem with fuel supply as I really got on it and when treated aggressively the car performs well. I ran it in lower gears up to 5500 RPMs, accelerating and decelerating a lot to try to dislodge crud if there was any. It didn’t help.
I have a Haynes manual but it hasn’t helped much. I had to replace a throttle position sensor on my own car a few years ago when it got to running badly. Could this cause the symptoms I’ve described? The Haynes doesn't much of anything about symptoms of a TPS malfunction.
Any help will be greatly appreciated!
Gene
The car is a 2000 Taurus SE with the dual overhead cam engine, 111,000 miles. After driving it back from California (about 800 miles) I attempted to repair a troublesome misfire (in spite of the problem I got 28. 5 mpg for the trip). In addition to an oil and filter change, within the last 75 miles I have installed the following with no change in operation:
Fuel filter
Spark plugs
Air filter
EGR valve and gasket
Repaired crankcase ventilation connections
Injector cleaner added for the last 700 miles of driving (added to four tanks of gas)
Two bottles of Heet added to the present tank of gas
I cannot see any vacuum lines that are bad. To test for vacuum leaks I used my propane torch (unlit of course) to see if the engine speed changed as the gas was discharged near the manifold and vacuum lines. No change in speed.
Here are the symptoms. With engine warm and idling, miss is evident at the tailpipe. Underway with either very light throttle or after a slight downgrade, when the gas pedal is slowly pressed the engine misses badly and shudders. I live a few hundred feet above the city and the car runs so rough that it has a hard time making the climb. I took it out on the highway today and there seems to be no problem with fuel supply as I really got on it and when treated aggressively the car performs well. I ran it in lower gears up to 5500 RPMs, accelerating and decelerating a lot to try to dislodge crud if there was any. It didn’t help.
I have a Haynes manual but it hasn’t helped much. I had to replace a throttle position sensor on my own car a few years ago when it got to running badly. Could this cause the symptoms I’ve described? The Haynes doesn't much of anything about symptoms of a TPS malfunction.
Any help will be greatly appreciated!
Gene