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#1
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2000 Civic stalled, engine light on
I was driving my 2000 Civic on the highway and it slowly ran down and
stalled (pressing accelerator didn't give it gas). It was -20 degrees at the time, but the car had been started in a warm garage and was running fine up til then - engine was at proper temperature. The gas tank was just under 1/8 full. I started it again and drove it to a gas station (no service bays though) and filled it up. It ran rough for a couple of minutes and the engine light came on. I drove it back home at low speed and it didn't have any more trouble. For the last week the engine light has remained on but the car seems to run just fine. It starts in cold weather, doesn't run rough, seems to have normal acceleration and gad mileage. I haven't read the OBD-II diagnostic code yet, but I'm tempted to just reset the fuse and see if the light comes back on and if not just ignore it ... Could this have been cold weather related - perhaps a near empty tank and frozen condensation from being in the heated garage? I don't know. Any Honda-knowledgeable readers out there have an opinion? Would it be safe to try driving it as is? Or is this a situation where I really *have* to take it in. Thanks - Kev |
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#2
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I would suggest pulling the backup fuse. This will
reset your computer. See if the CEL comes back. What probably happened is that you ran to low on gas. when you let the gas get that low, you run the risk of condensation is the gas tank. A little water would be ok (well not really, but it would just run through). This may also be exacerbated by constant changes in temp from heated garage to -20 temps. However, when you only have 1/8 of a tank of gas, that is alot of water that could potentially get into the gas. My rule of thumb in winter is to always make sure that I have at least 1/2 a tank. You can buy a water remover from any parts store, its made by STP. I doubt the formulation is much different from regular injector cleaner, but i would run some of that through as well. If all of that doesn't do anything, replace the fuel filter. may not be a bad idea anyways. t |
#3
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I pulled the fuse and the CEL went out. I then test drove it on the highway
(something I hadn't done since having the original problem) and it failed again - after about 15 minutes at highway speeds it seems to lose gas and stall. But I can start it again and as long as I drive slowly (<70 km/hr) it's ok - though the CEL is back on. So ... I am taking it in for servicing. Thanks for your response. "disallow" <loewen_t at yahoo.ca @> wrote in message lkaboutautos.com... >I would suggest pulling the backup fuse. This will > reset your computer. See if the CEL comes back. > > What probably happened is that you ran to low on gas. > when you let the gas get that low, you run the risk of > condensation is the gas tank. A little water would be ok > (well not really, but it would just run through). This > may also be exacerbated by constant changes in temp from > heated garage to -20 temps. > > However, when you only have 1/8 of a tank of gas, that is > alot of water that could potentially get into the gas. > > My rule of thumb in winter is to always make sure that I > have at least 1/2 a tank. You can buy a water remover from > any parts store, its made by STP. I doubt the formulation > is much different from regular injector cleaner, but i would > run some of that through as well. > > If all of that doesn't do anything, replace the fuel filter. may not be a > bad idea anyways. > > t > |
#4
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Ya get the code checked. That is weird. Maybe you MAP
sensor.... t |
#5
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Ya get the code checked. That is weird. Maybe you MAP
sensor.... t |
#6
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PS let us know how it turns out!
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#7
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The dealer (Calgary Honda) checked the code (P1106 baro sensor performance,
internal circuit of ECM failure), then cleared it, test drove the car and were unable to reproduce the problem. Charged me $95 and said that if the light came back on would require "extensive diagnosis and possible ECM replacement". So I'm not much further ahead than when I took the car in - just $95 poorer. Kev "Kevin" > wrote in message news:KFkEd.56800$nN6.25653@edtnps84... >I pulled the fuse and the CEL went out. I then test drove it on the highway >(something I hadn't done since having the original problem) and it failed >again - after about 15 minutes at highway speeds it seems to lose gas and >stall. But I can start it again and as long as I drive slowly (<70 km/hr) >it's ok - though the CEL is back on. > > So ... I am taking it in for servicing. Thanks for your response. > > "disallow" <loewen_t at yahoo.ca @> wrote in message > lkaboutautos.com... >>I would suggest pulling the backup fuse. This will >> reset your computer. See if the CEL comes back. >> >> What probably happened is that you ran to low on gas. >> when you let the gas get that low, you run the risk of >> condensation is the gas tank. A little water would be ok >> (well not really, but it would just run through). This >> may also be exacerbated by constant changes in temp from >> heated garage to -20 temps. >> >> However, when you only have 1/8 of a tank of gas, that is >> alot of water that could potentially get into the gas. >> >> My rule of thumb in winter is to always make sure that I >> have at least 1/2 a tank. You can buy a water remover from >> any parts store, its made by STP. I doubt the formulation >> is much different from regular injector cleaner, but i would >> run some of that through as well. >> >> If all of that doesn't do anything, replace the fuel filter. may not be a >> bad idea anyways. >> >> t >> > > |
#8
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Kevin wrote:
> I was driving my 2000 Civic on the highway and it slowly ran down and > stalled (pressing accelerator didn't give it gas). It was -20 degrees > at the time, but the car had been started in a warm garage and was > running fine up til then - engine was at proper temperature. The gas > tank was just under 1/8 full. I started it again and drove it to a gas > station (no service bays though) and filled it up. It ran rough for a > couple of minutes and the engine light came on. > > I drove it back home at low speed and it didn't have any more trouble. > For the last week the engine light has remained on but the car seems > to run just fine. It starts in cold weather, doesn't run rough, seems > to have normal acceleration and gad mileage. I haven't read the > OBD-II diagnostic code yet, but I'm tempted to just reset the fuse and > see if the light comes back on and if not just ignore it ... > > Could this have been cold weather related - perhaps a near empty tank > and frozen condensation from being in the heated garage? I don't know. > Any Honda-knowledgeable readers out there have an opinion? Would it be > safe to try driving it as is? Or is this a situation where I really > *have* to take it in. > > Thanks - > Kev > ---------------------------- It's not Honda-specific, but it is Alberta / Winter specific. As you asked, it's gas-line icing. Parking in parkades or heated garages with a low tank is just begging for condensation to get in. Use gasohol, or add methyl hydrate at each fill-up when it's way below freezing. Keep the 'headroom' in the tank to a minimum. The $95 . . At least it was only Canadian $$s :-( 'Curly' |
#9
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Hey Curly,
My 98 civic HATES gasohol. I avoid it at all costs, and blame it for making my Catalytic converter go bad (on warranty) a few years ago. Also, my gas mileage and performance goes down. Its wacky. I realize there is a fair amount of controversy regarding a 'safe' amount of ethanol in gasoline, but my experience in this matter makes me wanna stay FAR away from it.... t |
#10
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"TeGGer®" > wrote in message
.. . > "motsco_ _" <"motsco_ > wrote in > : > > Keeping the tank full may seem like lots of trouble to do...until you > start > getting ice in the fuel line and corrosion in the fuel lines, tank and > injectors. We are in an extreme cold spell (-20C to -30C daily). After running some STP water remover through (as previously suggested by t) - the car seems OK. No more stalling. So what should I do now to get the moisture out of my fuel system? Will the STP water remover do a complete job of that or is there another way? I have already marked up my Bible - "Thou shalt minimize headroom by keeping thy tank at least 3/4 full during the winter". (and I scratched out "Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's wife" cause my neighbor's wife is totally hot). > > -- > TeGGeR® > > The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ > www.tegger.com/hondafaq/ |
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