Boomdriver,
Mine is an 89. It doesn't have a cold start thing.
I guess the good thing is I don't think it has alot of miles on those injectors. How fast will it damage the engine?
I was looking at doing the master cylinder. I guess I could get some injectors and go ahead and replace them if it is causing engine damage.
the injectors really are a "do it yerself" job....quite easy with decent tools. It takes patience more than skill. Even then, with tools, it only takes maybe 1 hour to have them on the floor...A little longer to reassemble because of the need to check everything twice. The last thing you want is a small gas leak when its totally assembled...
Shops charge about $350 to $450 for labor to do injectors. Injectors are about $225 a set at FIC. Good, reliable products with
outstanding customer service. Look at YouTube for fuel injector videos. FIC made most of them. Very informative.
As far as engine damage, its not going to be fast or anything to be alarmed about. Its
not an emergency but it will shorten the life of an engine if its not addressed. Rich fuel washes off the oil film on the cylinders and that is how the wear takes place. Its slow,and minimal but it does occure. Rich fuel also gets into the oil thru normal means and because gasoline is a solvent that lessens the oils life and generates sludge faster. Again, its not an emergency. Its just something to be aware of. If the engine is utilizing the fuel, there is
NO problem.
The plug color
will help tell about that. You can throw all the fuel you want in a diesel and it goes faster. But a gas engine wants more air when there is more fuel. Sometimes it makes the engine run worse, not better. Its all about keeping the 14.7:1 air/fuel ratio, or as close as the ECM can get.
Look at the performance of the same size engines from 1970 to todays....much much more efficient today with more power, longer life and less emissions. Whats different? The fuel management. I hate to think of how bad the avg ratio was on a 1969 muscle car....No wonder there is smog.
If you have an adjustable fuel regulator, just turn the pressure down to under 40 psi. Thats what I was told if I needed to go back to 22 lb/hr. That is what I was told by the guy that sells LOTS of injectors to members here. The difference between the 22 lb and the 24 lb is a few psi of pressure.
Before you start worrying about changing injectors, look at the plugs. The evidence will be there and there is absolutely no disputing what is happening in the engine when looking at the color of the spark plug insulator. It should be off-white to a tan color. Brown is acceptable for a car that does more city driving, but a car that see's the freeway should be a lighter color. Anything darker than lt brown is running richer than you want..
If the plugs are dry and dark that is rich fuel. Dark & wet is probably oil burning confirmed by oil usage. If its not using any oil and the plugs are wet, thats
real rich.
I think NGK has a good plug color chart.
If your motor does not have the cold start injector, it uses the injectors to richen the mix for start-up. Where that signal comes from on yours, I do not know.
The master cylinder is something that I need to do also. My pedal went to the floor one time recently, then never did that again. I want to replace that master cylinder before it happens again. I am looking for a set of "speed bleeders" for the calipers so flushing the system and bleeding will be a simple one man job with no mess. Just can;t find the right size for the vette calipers. Speed bleeders have a build in check valve so there is no need to close them when letting off the pedal. just open the valve, pump the pedal and its done. use a hose to a bottle to catch the fluid thats spit out.