Originally Posted by Schrade View Post
No one got the proper technique for vacuum leak detection...
FIRST (fully warmed up motor); block the gas pedal, or block the  throttle linkage. YOU HAVE TO DO THIS TO GET A STEADY IDLE , around  1,250 rpms, or a little higher. If you don't, you can fish starting  fluid, a propane hose, or WD40, or Krylon, or hair spray, or pee,  anything, until you need a sweater in Hades, but if the motor is lopin'  idle already from a vacuum leak, you  ain't gonna' find any leak, unless it's so big that Little Jack Horner  can stick his thumb in it and pull out a pineapple NOPE.
AFTER you get a steady idle, THEN, you can spray starting fluid  everywhere - that's the best detector, because it's vapor pressure is  very high - a LITTLE at a time, all around the motor, until you get the  rpm SURGE. Follow the vacuum lines to the  EVAP cannister too. You might even have to follow the EVAP lines from  the EVAP cannister to the gas tank too, but that vacuum  leak will show up as a DTC 32 EGR fault, and won't normally show as  loping idle, unless the EVAP cannister has been by-passed (been there,  saw that uh-HUH yup).
If you get a surge in a tight spot, and can't tell exactly where it is,  light a book of matches, blow out the match heads while they're still  burnin', and feed the smoke to the tight spot to see it get drawn in.
Fear not the starting fluid; you cannot put the can down fast enough and  light the matches fast enough to catch the starting fluid, because the  vapor pressure is so high.
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Wrench Wizard OUT!