85 Mondial QV appears to be running rich | FerrariChat

85 Mondial QV appears to be running rich

Discussion in 'Technical Q&A' started by Threeofnine, Mar 11, 2024.

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, Skimlinks, and others.

  1. Threeofnine

    Threeofnine Formula Junior

    Dec 11, 2020
    393
    Birmingham, AL USA
    Full Name:
    Jarrod Heath
    I picked up an 85 Mondial QV project car. The car appears to be running quite rich. Upon cold start the car sputters and has a fairly strong fuel smell coming from the exhaust. It was serviced right before I took ownership but it appears the problem was not fixed. The problem is somewhat intermittent, occasionally the car starts up and runs fine but other times it idles erratically and sputters. I would be most appreciative if someone could point me in the right direction.

    the following is listed in the recent service record.
    “Replace 1-4 fuel injectors, rebuilt fuel distributor, check fuel pump pressure, check warm up regulator control pressure, cold start injector appears to add too much fuel at cold start disconnected but car cold starts fine, check ignition, repair vacuum at warm up regulator”
     
  2. Ferrari Tech

    Ferrari Tech Formula 3

    Mar 5, 2010
    1,217
    Georgia
    Full Name:
    Wade Williams
    Having worked on many of these cars, I will say it is difficult to pin point one thing. You really need to find a shop that is VERY familiar with this system. It is odd that they replaced only 4 injectors and disabled the cold start without actually repairing the system. As well, the twin ignition systems must be working correctly or it will appear to run rich.
    Since it is a "project car" I am guessing it will need more work. Poor spark plug wires will make these cars run really poorly. Check them and make sure they are good. I was told 650 Ohm pre foot is a good number. Over the years, I have found this to be a good place to start. Many cars read zero connection. You can replace the wire and reuse the sleeving and boots most times. The extensions should have no resistance, I rarely find a bad extension as it is just a metal rod. Make sure there are no signs of arcing through the plastic, still not common but it happens.
     
    fatbillybob and Threeofnine like this.
  3. Threeofnine

    Threeofnine Formula Junior

    Dec 11, 2020
    393
    Birmingham, AL USA
    Full Name:
    Jarrod Heath
    Thanks Wade. I am going to clean all electrical connections today. I will also attempt to diagnose to the best of my limited ability, but will probably end up taking the car to a shop to get it running at optimally. How booked up is Merlin currently? It seems most of the shops in the region are booked up for the next few months.

    I also thought it was strange that they only replaced the 1-4 injectors. I have considered replacing injectors 5-8, do you think that might not be a bad idea? The car passed a PPI at a reputable shop and has a fresh major service along with an extensive amount of additional work. Due to the intermittent nature of the issue it’s possible it did not appear during the PPI. I also feel that it stumbles a little bit below 2k RPMs, but runs beautifully once the needed crosses the 2k mark.
     
  4. theunissenguido

    theunissenguido F1 Rookie
    Owner Silver Subscribed

    Jan 21, 2004
    2,667
    Argent/Brasil
    Full Name:
    Guido
    I see you're in Alabama right ?! No need for that cold start injector in your climat. Just disconnect the Bosch connector of it But you have to check if that injector is not leaking even disconnected.
     
    afterburner and Threeofnine like this.
  5. Threeofnine

    Threeofnine Formula Junior

    Dec 11, 2020
    393
    Birmingham, AL USA
    Full Name:
    Jarrod Heath
    Yes I am in Alabama. The CS injector has been disconnected ever since it returned from the service center. Tomorrow, I’m gonna try to take the injector off to check for leaks.
     
  6. Threeofnine

    Threeofnine Formula Junior

    Dec 11, 2020
    393
    Birmingham, AL USA
    Full Name:
    Jarrod Heath
    #6 Threeofnine, Mar 12, 2024
    Last edited: Mar 12, 2024
    Here is a short video of the very poor idle, along with fuel smoke pouring out of the tailpipes. it’s not always this bad, but every once in a while upon cold start it is. Also, often when I turn the car off after the engine has ran for a while, I can’t restart it until I wait 10-20 minutes—it just turns over but does not fire. I believe it is likely because it is flooded. There is always a strong exhaust smell of unburnt fuel when running and the tailpipes have a slight fuel odor.

    Today I tried disconnecting the O2 sensor to see if there was any change in the way the engine ran, but after multiple experiments, I couldn’t see any change whatsoever in the way the engine idled regardless if the o2 was disconnected or connected.
     

    Attached Files:

  7. moysiuan

    moysiuan F1 Rookie
    Silver Subscribed

    Nov 1, 2005
    4,186
    Canada
    The fuel injection system is mostly designed to meet emmissions and to do that is has to run well at low rpm. Once off idle, the car is much less sensitive to fuel mixture, indeed may run very well at higher rpm when rich.

    So if it runs well off idle, it is probably not an ignition related issue. That said these cars run like two four cylinder engines strapped together, and the good bank can offset the bad bank to a surprising degree. You could take out a couple of easily accessible spark plugs and see if they are all fuel fouled, if only one/some are that is ignition related.

    My wild card suspicion based on the service work described is that the rebuilt fuel distributor is not calibrated correctly. There is very small tolerence for setting the plunger depth in the distributor body. If it is not set correctly fuel will flow at idle greater than it is supposed to. As rpm's rise the problem will abate. Restart is very hard as the car is as you say flooding.

    The distributor plunger ideally needs to be calibrated on a flow bench, otherwise it is going to be a guess by the rebuider. Do confirm if you can who rebuilt the distributor. If it was CIS Flowtech, you are good to go. If not, then the issue noted is worth considering. The unit can be rebuilt with a seal kit quite easily, but that plunger set up does require experience to get it right absent bench testing capability.

    There is a fairly simple check for whether the dist plunger is set correctly.

    You remove one of the gas lines to the top of the fuel distributor that feeds one of the fuel injectors. You then jump the fuel pump relay and cause the fuel pump to activate while the ignition is in the on position but the car is not running. There should be no fuel welling up in the distributor pipe opening when the throttle is closed in its idle position. If the fuel rises and spills out, the plunger is not correctly set. (Of course, if fuel comes out it is helpful to have someone working the relay jumper, and stop the jump immediately so no fuel/fire risk ensues). If no fuel rises in the distributor, the plunger is set up properly.

    I would note that setting idle mixture on these cars is not so simple. It is supposed to be done with an exhaust gas analyzer, which is becoming a rare piece of service equipment. It is possible the mixture simply needs to be leaned out. A tiny movement of the mixture screw can solve for things. A 1/16 turn of the mixture screw counter clockwise is leaning the system. Many caution against playing with the mixture screw as the problem may well be elsewhere. But it is worth a try, just reset that screw to where you started if it makes no impact, and continue to diagnose other potentials.

    Mechanics who work on Mercedes of the same vintage would understand this injection system.

    The fueling system when all is in order is quite reliable and effective.
     
    fatbillybob and Threeofnine like this.
  8. Threeofnine

    Threeofnine Formula Junior

    Dec 11, 2020
    393
    Birmingham, AL USA
    Full Name:
    Jarrod Heath
    I believe your suspicion that it is not calibrated correctly will likely prove to be correct. I spoke to the previous owner and the car apparently never had these specific issues previously.

    I did try to check the spark plugs today but none of my spark plug sockets appeared to fit. I thought the size was 13/16 but my craftsman socket didn’t fit. I will borrow a few sockets from a friend tomorrow. I guess it would be possible that the car is missing on one cylinder but I don’t see how that would cause a hard starting/flooding problem. It would be great if it turns out to be something as simple as a bad plug wire.

    That is good to know about Mercedes mechanics. We don’t have anyone in town that works on Ferraris (well we have one, but he has a reputation of destroying engines) but we do have a few German car mechanics.
     
  9. Ferrari Tech

    Ferrari Tech Formula 3

    Mar 5, 2010
    1,217
    Georgia
    Full Name:
    Wade Williams
    Jarrod, I am always busy and have a number of big projects but I work in smaller tuning and maintenance jobs as they come through. Give us a call and we can schedule you in if you like.
     
    Threeofnine likes this.
  10. moysiuan

    moysiuan F1 Rookie
    Silver Subscribed

    Nov 1, 2005
    4,186
    Canada
    If the car has its tool kit, there is a spark plug socket in there.
     
    Threeofnine likes this.
  11. Threeofnine

    Threeofnine Formula Junior

    Dec 11, 2020
    393
    Birmingham, AL USA
    Full Name:
    Jarrod Heath
    The tool kit is present but a few tools are missing, sadly including the spark plug socket.
     
  12. Threeofnine

    Threeofnine Formula Junior

    Dec 11, 2020
    393
    Birmingham, AL USA
    Full Name:
    Jarrod Heath
    Great. Im going to check a couple things today,(spark plugs, CS injector) but I imagine I’ll be making a call this evening or tomorrow.
     
  13. moysiuan

    moysiuan F1 Rookie
    Silver Subscribed

    Nov 1, 2005
    4,186
    Canada
    All indications are that plugs for your QV would have the 21mm hex which is 13/16 inches. My 3.2 has a 18mm hex plugs. Maybe you have some usual brand of plug that has a different than typical Hex size.
     
    Threeofnine likes this.
  14. moysiuan

    moysiuan F1 Rookie
    Silver Subscribed

    Nov 1, 2005
    4,186
    Canada
    There should be no need to disconnect the cold start injector, it should work as advertised and should be connected. It can have a leak though, so even when disconnected it would over fuel. What is the mileage on your car, you refer to it as a project, but recommisioning a lower miler car can present different issues than restoring a high miler. You might run some Marvel Mystery oil, it will clean up varnish inside a fuel system that has sat too long.
     
    Threeofnine likes this.
  15. Threeofnine

    Threeofnine Formula Junior

    Dec 11, 2020
    393
    Birmingham, AL USA
    Full Name:
    Jarrod Heath
    Is there a way to check for a leak without removing it? I was planning to try the bottle method. The car has 34k miles on it and should be fairly good mechanically. Right before I took ownership it had a ton of work done, the final bill was over $12k. Major service, all engine/gearbox leaks fix, fuel system rebuilt (which may be the issue) and a ton of little things. PPI reported the car was very well sorted mechanically. Most of the issues now are cosmetic and cosmetic restoration is what I’m best at.
     
  16. moysiuan

    moysiuan F1 Rookie
    Silver Subscribed

    Nov 1, 2005
    4,186
    Canada
    You can only do an electrical check without removing it.

    With the low mileage, I would not expect that valve to have failed. I just replaced mine when trying to diagnose broader fueling issues rather than try to bench test it.

    With the low mileage, I would not expect that valve to have failed.
     
    Threeofnine likes this.
  17. Threeofnine

    Threeofnine Formula Junior

    Dec 11, 2020
    393
    Birmingham, AL USA
    Full Name:
    Jarrod Heath
    I just pulled one of the plugs. I believe she is very rich.
    Image Unavailable, Please Login
     
  18. moysiuan

    moysiuan F1 Rookie
    Silver Subscribed

    Nov 1, 2005
    4,186
    Canada
    Yes, but it is not soaking with fuel, not as crazy rich as one might have expected. The picture is blurry, that spark plug gap looks a bit too tight?
     
  19. Threeofnine

    Threeofnine Formula Junior

    Dec 11, 2020
    393
    Birmingham, AL USA
    Full Name:
    Jarrod Heath
  20. Threeofnine

    Threeofnine Formula Junior

    Dec 11, 2020
    393
    Birmingham, AL USA
    Full Name:
    Jarrod Heath
    I also just noticed that the distributor cover for bank 2 is missing. Not sure if that is of any relevance. It wasn’t mentioned during the PPI.
    Image Unavailable, Please Login
     
  21. moysiuan

    moysiuan F1 Rookie
    Silver Subscribed

    Nov 1, 2005
    4,186
    Canada
    The rubber cover is to add a degree of water resistance in the rain. It is reproduced/available from the usual parts suppliers.
     
    Threeofnine likes this.
  22. moysiuan

    moysiuan F1 Rookie
    Silver Subscribed

    Nov 1, 2005
    4,186
    Canada
    Yes, the gaps look correct, you are definitely running rich, and since all the plugs are looking the same we are likely ruling out ignition issues. You will have to change out those plugs if you want to have the car run better, it will be hard to eg. Play with the mixture screw and see what happens when the plugs are now going to cause some hartd start and rough idle. Either that or try the 7,500rpm Italian tuneup to clean them up.
     
    Threeofnine likes this.
  23. Threeofnine

    Threeofnine Formula Junior

    Dec 11, 2020
    393
    Birmingham, AL USA
    Full Name:
    Jarrod Heath
    I just ran the car for an bit and then checked the plugs again. I also pulled the access panel behind the rear seats and checked bank # 2 for consistency. The plugs are now wet and smell very strongly of raw gasoline.
     
  24. moysiuan

    moysiuan F1 Rookie
    Silver Subscribed

    Nov 1, 2005
    4,186
    Canada
    Threeofnine likes this.
  25. moysiuan

    moysiuan F1 Rookie
    Silver Subscribed

    Nov 1, 2005
    4,186
    Canada
    Hmm, I might have expected that also to be the case on the first plugs you had removed in the rear bank. With one bank wet and the other bank relatively dry (but still showing signs of running rich), that could point to eg. the coil failing on the one bank, or the dist cap/rotor worn, the wires poorly pinned in the cap or the wires being old and failing (as one original poster suggested).

    Other items to consider are the crank position sensors. These can also fail, they are magnets and the engine heat and time can degrade them.

    My hunch remains on fueling, but as usual there are plenty of other possibilities one can consider.
     
    Threeofnine likes this.

Share This Page