Rough idle, stalling at times

mtx911

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Nov 2, 2009
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calgary
Simple terms - a hunk of metal (or other thing) starts out at ambient temperature. It's exposed to other another temperature that warms (or cools) the surface. As time goes on, the head (or cold) evens out throughout the metal and the thing is "heat soaked". If you take away the source of the heat (or cold), the part will remain hot (or cold) for quite some time as it gives off the heat (or cold) that has "soaked" in the metal.

In terms of intercoolers, as the compressed air is compressed, it gets warmer. As it passes through the intercooler, the air gives off heat to the intercooler. And the intercooler gives off that air to the outside air that passes over the intercooler. After a while, the intercooler "heat soaks" and can't absorb as much heat from the compressed air to cool it. The temperature of the compressed air to the engine goes up and that increases the chance of detonation in the cylinder.

Sitting idle (with no air passing over the cooler) can also raise the "heat soak" causing loss of performance (or detonation), but it will reduce the "heat soak" as the car is moving with fresh (relatively) cool air passing over the intercooler again.

The same thing happens with cooling systems. The combustion chamber temperatures can get quite high, and the coolant passing through the cylinder head carries away the heat. But when you turn off the engine, there is still a high amount of residual heat in the chamber material that has not been removed. That heat "soaks" the head (and the coolant) and makes localized hot spots - the normal coolant temperature may be 195 degrees, but that local hot spot can easily get to be 20 - 50 degrees hotter. That's why many cars have a fan that will kick on after the car is parked if it detect that the engine is too hot. The Elise/Exige has a small pump that is turned on and cycles the coolant in the head through the heater circuit to dissipate the heat.
 

Neal

New Member
Jun 15, 2007
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Melbourne
mk3tattoos;1491283 said:
i have two more questions. What is heat soak, and how do you check the vsv to make sure it works?

Use the MKIII bible on TSRM. It has every thing. Use the link i posted previously and your questions shall be answered.

It really is very simple to test (with detailed pictures and all on TSRM) but you have to read and understand it for your self.
 

S.A. supra

New Member
Feb 15, 2009
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Buda, Texas
mtx911;1490844 said:
Somethings being a bitch.. not a vaccum leak it wud do it all the time if it was..
not spark.. i have no clue guna have to rip some shit apart n clean it all
im thinkin iscv or something stick.. afm dirty as shit i have no clue
couple seconds on the gas pedal fixes it tho.. dont get it

Not necessarily, I has a vacuum leak and the rpms would drop so low that my engine light would flicker and almost stall out. And like you say I would get on the gas and it would correct it self, kind of like a vented bov. I got lucky the leak got so bad that it started to hiss and i was able to locate it. It was the throttle body gasket. good luck
 

hvyman

Dang Dude! No Way Man.
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Apr 17, 2007
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Fullerton,CA
exactly a small vacuum leak the stock ecu can correct but when it becomes a huge leak it will stutter and stall threw out all driving.
 

mtx911

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Nov 2, 2009
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calgary
yeah i jus dont shut the car off,, only seems to do it in the cold weather..
warm weather it fires rite up again.. all good in the hood..
anyone kno how to adjust the wastegate from stock boost to like safe 11 pounds.
 

mtx911

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Nov 2, 2009
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calgary
Not sure, no signs yet of bhg.. i put my money down the previous owner must have swapped the gasket cuz it obviously wuda been toast by now..
bone stock cept 3" catback
 

mtx911

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Nov 2, 2009
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calgary
hahaa yes i was ballin in a sick hoinda civic .. with all my azn homies eating rice
n reving our fart cans