After all this.........there has been a Maris Piper malfunction

This is what your page says for blocked exhaust:lexi wrote:It may work with better with a simple non cat exhaust............like old Landy?
None of the ones you list Simon according to this rather simple guide. http://www.autospeed.com/cms/A_2393/article.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;What signs do you look for in the vacuum reading when the exhaust is blocked ?
Obviously driving under load will give a higher back pressure reading, however the fact that the engine is not under high load during the test is already factored into the 2 psi figure which has been empirically derived from the testing of many blocked and not blocked exhaust systems across a range of vehicles...addo wrote:The 3000RPM test reading will need to be driving, with a solid load. Maybe Lexi can loan you a bootful of duchess slates?
Maintaining 3000 RPM under load requires more air, more fuel - it makes more waste gas (by volume) so the effect of restriction is more apparent.
Exactly what I said earlier - a vacuum reading might show a chronically blocked exhaust where the car can barely drive, but that's not what I have, its blocked enough to be down on power but not chronically blocked. Only a back pressure test will show the more subtle blockage it might have.addo wrote:That would be true for a chronically restricted exhaust (eg, the potato trick, or a crushed pipe).
It was intermittent a few months ago, but its pretty much permanently bad now.What you're chasing is an intermittent fault - which if it were a restricted exhaust - is typically brought about by pieces moving around and at times converging to appreciably block gas flow.
Why haven't you taken it or them off and ran the car without it then? Seriously, it took me about 5 mins (without a ramp, just a spanner, suspension on high, and an axle stand) to remove the split rear box on my Activa, and it ran fine, and quiet enough without it... I can't imagine it would be much longer to remove the centre box too..Mandrake wrote: my gut feeling (or hope) is that its one of the mufflers...that the mesh that holds the fibreglass wadding in the muffler has rusted away and allowed the wadding to get loose inside where it moves about
A few reasons Mike...Northern_Mike wrote:Why haven't you taken it or them off and ran the car without it then? Seriously, it took me about 5 mins (without a ramp, just a spanner, suspension on high, and an axle stand) to remove the split rear box on my Activa, and it ran fine, and quiet enough without it... I can't imagine it would be much longer to remove the centre box too..Mandrake wrote: my gut feeling (or hope) is that its one of the mufflers...that the mesh that holds the fibreglass wadding in the muffler has rusted away and allowed the wadding to get loose inside where it moves about
I know, I'm bracing myself already.RichardW wrote: BTW - Addo is going to be insufferable if this is what's wrong with it.....![]()
Out of interest, here's the info I'm basing today's exhaust test criteria on:addo wrote:The 3000RPM test reading will need to be driving, with a solid load. Maybe Lexi can loan you a bootful of duchess slates?
Maintaining 3000 RPM under load requires more air, more fuel - it makes more waste gas (by volume) so the effect of restriction is more apparent.
In your experience of intermittently blocked cats where the blockage is presumably broken away chunks of honeycomb that are moving about, would you say that the broken bits usually end up on the input side of the cat or the output side ?addo wrote:I've personally encountered on other cars:
Infiniti V6 - blocked precats
C5 I - blocked cat
Xantia CT - blocked cat; loose pieces then blocked mid-unit
406 - blocked cat
A reliable source had the midlength silencer fail inwards on a 306 petrol.
The C5 was sent away; the owner had no money. The Infiniti was gutted, the CT and 406 had high-flow generic replacements fitted; the latter car instantly returned better fuel figures.
With not the centre or rear mufflers, the cars are quite noisy on the road, but with just the rear off it's only a "boy racer" type loudness.