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Question: fuel pump

English Guy

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 8, 2008
Messages
154
Location
Stevenage, Hertfordshire uk
Corvette
89 red coupe
hi folks,i'm having trouble starting 89 l98 and think it might be fuel pump.when ign key is turned(not cranking engine)fuel pump buzz's for a couple of seconds then goes quite,is this right or should it buzz all the time?thanks for any info:thumb
 
hi folks,i'm having trouble starting 89 l98 and think it might be fuel pump.when ign key is turned(not cranking engine)fuel pump buzz's for a couple of seconds then goes quite,is this right or should it buzz all the time?thanks for any info:thumb
Yeah,It should run and then shut off till the engine is started! Should build 34-39 lb fuel pressure at key up on a L98!!:thumb
 
what kind of starting issue are you having?
 
Check out thepartsladi on the bay, she has oem at a real good price.
 
Is your SES light on when car is running for those few seconds?
 
Keep a journal

I would suggest you keep a journal of the things you try and the results. Otherwise you will be :hb trying to remember what they were.

I am going to suggest that you check the TPS (Throttle Body Sensor)

I have discovered that it has a hand in about everything the ECM does and thinks. It probable is one of the most involved in how the car runs.

Hope this sheds some light on the tps for you
I know it is for a 93 but the princple is the same for your car



Throttle Position Sensor (TPS)
Copied from 1993 Service Manual
The Throttle Position sensor (TPS) is a potentiometer connected to the throttle shaft on the throttle body. It is a potentiometer with one end connected to 5 volts
from the ECM and the other to ECM ground. A third wire is connected to the ECM to measure the voltage from the TP sensor. As the throttle valve angle is changed (accelerator pedal moved), the voltage output of the TP sensor also changes. At a closed throttle position, the voltage output of the TP sensor is low (approximately .5 volt). As the throttle valve opens, the output voltage should be approximately 5 volts.

By monitoring the output voltage from the TP sensor, the ECM can determine fuel delivery based on throttle valve angle (driver demand). A broken or loose TP sensor can cause intermittent burst of fuel from the injectors and cause an unstable idle, because the ECM detects the throttle is moving.

If the TP sensor circuit is open, the ECM will set a DTC 22. If the TP sensor circuit is shorted a DTC 21 will be set. A problem in any of the TP sensor circuits will set either a DTC 21 or 22. Once a DTC is set, the ECM will use a default value for TP sensor, and some vehicle performance will return.

A personal note, when my TPS failed it DID NOT set a code other than to tell me the ECM was bad.

I used a couple of straight pins through the wires to hook the meter on


 
Hi John
Many thanks for the detailed info, i will be giving the tps a good looking over but please could you tell me what DTC stands for?Cheers:thumb
 
DTC stands for Diagnostic Trouble Code. SES stands for Service Engine Soon The SES light if it stays on is telling you that it has stored codes for possible trouble in a given system. By pulling the codes you are accessing the DTC stored in the ECM memory.
 
I would attempt to retrieve any codes that may be stored. It is possible that the service engine soon (SES) light may not be lit, and codes have been set.
 
Thats very possible....the C-4 was the first to have trouble code memory. It may not be indicating a current code but it will have a stored code or a history unless the memory has been wiped by battery disconnect.
 
My 1989 had the same problem. First problem was the the motor died when i was driving. After i towed it home i found 12 volts to the pump but it was not running. I replaced the fuel pump, strainer and the fuel filter. The car would start run a short time and shut down. I was told to check the injectors for shorts.The #7 injector was shorted (3.2 ohms should be 16 ohms). I reconnected all but # 7 injector and now the motor runs and does not shut down. So now i going to order and replace all 8 injectors.
 
The #7 injector was shorted (3.2 ohms should be 16 ohms). I reconnected all but # 7 injector and now the motor runs and does not shut down.
If one injector is shorted the computer will shut down all the injectors in that bank so you will be only running on 4 cylinders
 
Exactly...
Something that many L-98 owners do not know, is that
ALL injectors on one side operate at the same time, together. In effect, there are only 2 injector circuits on the L-98 C-4 even though it has 8 injectors. Short any injector and its like killing that side of the engine. Some shorts can lead to the whole set being stuck Open, flooding the engine with fuel.
So, the L-98 is not all that far from the crossfire in evolution.
 

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