Well, decided after all that to keep my 400i | FerrariChat

Well, decided after all that to keep my 400i

Discussion in '365 GT4 2+2/400/412' started by bergxu, May 19, 2007.

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  1. bergxu

    bergxu Formula 3

    Aug 16, 2005
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    Aaron
    Well fellas, after going round and round on eBay and finally nailing down a buyer, I made a serious change of heart and decided I didn't want to let my 400i out of my posession, drastic I know, but every time I look at the car, I just love it (and I guess finally came to my senses about (not) selling her!). Well anyhow, since I've elected to keep her in my herd, I've got to get to the bottom of my issue with the left bank running rich, and this is what's happening:

    When I start the car, I see a little fuel drip leaking from an exhaust flange on the left side of the car, so it's obviously dumping raw fuel into the exhaust (I haven't run it but a couple of minutes since this began, just trying to diagnose it). I recently put a new dizzy cap on, new rotor, new wires, new plugs in and all new injectors. I double checked the firing order on the body of the dizzy (1-12-5-8-3-10-6-7-2-11-4-9) in clockwise rotation looking down on the distributor. Also have the plug wires in the correct places (#1 starting at the right front (right side meaning when sitting in the car), going in a "U" shape with #12 ending at the left front). I have the right bank tuned fine, the plugs are a nice ash grey color but the left side is really rich, I mean REALLY rich. I have also checked that the control plunger in the fuel head is not binding (I lifted up on the sensor plate and made sure it dropped back down smoothly with a little "bounce" before it re-seated itself, which it's doing).

    Before I take this any further, I need to clarify something on mixture adjustment: When I'm standing on the left side of the car, looking down onto the driver's side fuel distributor, am I correct in that turning the mixture screw (the 3mm allen screw right "behind" the fuel head) COUNTERCLOCKWISE will lean the mixture? Or is it the opposite since it is a "backflow" system (i.e. sensor plate rises instead of falls on throttle, which it does in a Mercedes)?

    I'm going to set the crank to TDC and make sure the rotor arm matches up with the mark on the dizzy body, just to be sure that's totally in order, but what else could possibly be causing this?? I obviously don't want to drive the car because of risking engine damage with fuel wash in the oil. But the car was invited to our local Concours d' Elegance in June (another reason why I decided to keep her ;) ) and I need to have her running in top form. Something that could cause one bank to overfuel, or cause the ignition system not to hit on the left bank?

    Cheers,
    Aaron
     
  2. dstacy

    dstacy F1 World Champ
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    HOORAY !!!



    CORRECT my friend. Counter to lean, and Clock to rich. You're on the right track
     
  3. bergxu

    bergxu Formula 3

    Aug 16, 2005
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    Update:

    Checked the timing, it's right where it needs to be, and plenty of spark getting to the left bank, so it's something fuel related on that side. Can a bad fuel distributor cause overfueling? Adjusting the mixture doesn't seem to make any bit of difference.

    ??

    Cheers,
    Aaron
    '82 GTSi
    '83 400iA
     
  4. aidanparte

    aidanparte Formula 3

    Jul 18, 2004
    1,222
    It might be the system for returning excess fuel back to the tank - I understand that the whole injection system runs at high pressure so it would seem possible that if the return system isn't working it would cause your symptoms.

    Aidan
    PS Glad you decided to keep your 400!
     
  5. bundas

    bundas F1 Veteran
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    Dec 31, 2005
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    is evans auto an option for fixing 400i problems
     
  6. ed_and_tonny

    ed_and_tonny Karting

    Aug 4, 2006
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    well, not being a 400i (or any v12 owner) this is just a question and shot in the dark - are there dual sets of sensors on this beast feeding one or more ECUs that could possibly be leading to an overload of fuel to only 1 bank. My Maserati FI v-6 has multiple sensors that collectively control the fuel mixture (throttle body position, ambient air intake sensor in the air intake plenum, and coolant sensor). the ambient air temp and the coolant sensor can have a TREMENDOUS effect on fuel delivery. It took me several weeks to finally isolate to the air temp sensor that effectively had an infinity reading with the ohm meter which was telling the ECU that the air temp was -40C. Talk about raw fuel to wrong places! plugs foul, CAT drastically overheating, fuel consumption a 4 mpg!
    ed
     
  7. ed_and_tonny

    ed_and_tonny Karting

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    #7 ed_and_tonny, May 22, 2007
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
  8. bergxu

    bergxu Formula 3

    Aug 16, 2005
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    A-HA!

    Ok, I've discovered that with a 400i, there is 'firing order' and there is 'firing order'. The true firing order is of course 1-12-5-8-3-10-6-7-2-11-4-9 however, starting with #1 on the dist. cap, you do NOT follow that sequence, as you would normally with most other cars. Because of the 180 degree difference between the contacts on the rotor, the actual firing order is 180 degrees +1. Thanks to Mark from Concours Cars for this clarification!

    So, beginning at #1 on the cap, the sequence of the wire connections is as follows (clockwise)...

    1-7-5-11-3-9-6-12-2-8-4-10

    So, now I have the car running on all 12 except that it wants to run for about 10 sec (runs well when it runs) but then just dies as if someone yanked the fuel pump relays. I'm going to check them but they are fairly recently replaced. And the round, black electrical portion of the ignition switch has been changed as well.

    Continuing the hunt....

    Cheers,
    Aaron
    '82 GTSi
    '83 400iA
     
  9. markcF355

    markcF355 F1 Rookie
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    Aaron, you have it backwards.

    The firing order for a 400i is 1-7-5-11-3-9-6-12-2-8-4-10.

    Due to the ping-pong operation of the distributor, the wires are fit to the cap in this order: 1-12-5-8-3-10-6-7-2-11-4-9. (clockwise from 1)
     
  10. bergxu

    bergxu Formula 3

    Aug 16, 2005
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    Mark,

    The way you suggested is how I originally had it wired and it wouldn't run on the left bank. I spoke to Mark from Concours Cars and he said this was a very typical mistake to think that the wires are ordered the way you suggested. I checked what Mark said using the old cap and rotor and it is indeed wired how he said it was. If you take the old cap and rotor and spin the rotor inside the cap, in the same sequence that Mark said, it does, in fact fire the cylinders in the order of 1-12-5-8-3-10-6-7-2-11-4-9. BUT in order to get the rotor to fire those cylinders in that order, the wires must be connected as such (clockwise from #1 on the mark of the dizzy); 1-7-5-11-3-9-6-12-2-8-4-10. It's confusing, but it worked! When the car runs, it fires on all 12 and runs smooth as silk, the problem now is that it dies after 10 sec.. and I'm still hunting for that cause.

    Cheers,
    Aaron
    '82 GTSi
    '83 400iA
     
  11. markcF355

    markcF355 F1 Rookie
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    #11 markcF355, May 27, 2007
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
    I asked two people who serviced 400s over the years and they both said to set it up as in my last post. I have a brand new Ferrari distributor cap and the wire labels on it agree as well as on the old one. I installed it yesterday and it runs strong.

    The issue here is we are all correct! The ping-pong distributor will "convert" 1-7-5-11-3-9-6-12-2-8-4-10 to 1-12-5-8-3-10-6-7-2-11-4-9 or vice-versa.

    The real question is, which is the Firing order and which is the Wiring order?

    The "... the firing order on the body of the dizzy (1-12-5-8-3-10-6-7-2-11-4-9) in clockwise rotation looking down on the distributor." is the Wiring order. If you look in the owners manual and on the right wheel well, you should find the Firing order.

    Its funny that in both setups the right bank doesn't change, but the left bank goes 180 degrees out of phase.

    Just as a test, pull the plug wires on the left bank and see if it runs any differently. I think you might be igniting the fuel as its leaving the cylinder in the middle of the exhaust stroke.

    If you don't see any significant change, try it my way. (You will probably see a lot more raw fuel mist out of the exhaust with the wires pulled, ignore it)

    Also, after all these fun and games, set the timing and then drive around for awhile and then check it again. The distributor drive setup on these engines isn't the tightest.
    Image Unavailable, Please Login
     
  12. dstacy

    dstacy F1 World Champ
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    Fuel pump or accumulater? I'd check them out.
    Got $1 that says thats where you'll find the trouble.
     
  13. 2NA

    2NA F1 World Champ
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    filter?
     
  14. bergxu

    bergxu Formula 3

    Aug 16, 2005
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    Well, either way, I've got the car going on all 12 except that it just shuts off, as if you were to yank the fuel pump relays. When it runs, it runs smoothly. I checked the fuel pump fuses, I see they're supposed to be 16A but someone has plugged in 20A fuses in their place. I'm going to get some correct fuses and see if that cures it. I had a similar problem on my 308 where it would just die when you were sitting at a stoplight, I found that someone had wired a 30A (!!) inline fuse in place of the proper one on the fuse block. I purchased new blocks from Birdman and wired the fuel pump circuit back the way it was supposed to be (and replaced the FP relay) and the problem hasn't reoccurred in at least 8,000 miles of driving. So I guess the problem there was that the fuse was letting too much power through and overheating the FP relay, which I'm hoping is the same problem with the 400.

    The issue with the 400 certainly doesn't seem to be a hard fuel related problem, per se. More so an electrical gremlin lurking somewhere.

    Cheers,
    Aaron
    '82 GTSi
    '83 400iA
     
  15. Steve Magnusson

    Steve Magnusson Two Time F1 World Champ
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    Couple of questions on your 400i engine stopping 10 sec after starting problem:

    1. If you unplug the safety switch on the airflow meter and turn the key "on" do the fuel pumps run? (they should)

    2. Have you tried a different ...101 relay in the relay T position? During starter motor cranking (when the airflow plate is not deflected and the safety switch is closed) +12V power to close the fuel pump relays Q and R gets transmitted via one path inside the T relay. After the engine starts, and the safety switch opens, +12V power to close the fuel pump relays goes thru a different path inside relay T (and, if this second path inside relay T is bad, you get the symptom that you have -- the fuel pumps run and pressurize the system during starter motor cranking so the engine fires, but when you release the key to the "on" position the fuel pumps stop and the engine stops shortly thereafter after the fuel pressure falls. In any case -- it's a fairly painless thing to try ;))
     
  16. bergxu

    bergxu Formula 3

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    Steve,

    Thanks for the suggestion! I shall try that and see if it isn't my gremlin! I figured it had to be something like what you're describing.

    If I recall though, I didn't see a safety switch plugged into the driver's side throttle plenum, only one on the passenger's side. I did see the connection on the driver's side, but no plug (??)

    Cheers,
    Aaron
    '82 GTSi
    '83 400iA
     
  17. markcF355

    markcF355 F1 Rookie
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    There is only one safety switch in use. Both air boxes have a plug since they are identical parts.
     
  18. bergxu

    bergxu Formula 3

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    Ahh gotcha. Thanks Mark.

    Onto the relays!
     
  19. bergxu

    bergxu Formula 3

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    Amazing what some gas will do in terms of getting an engine to stay running
     
  20. dstacy

    dstacy F1 World Champ
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    ...and the fix was?
     
  21. aidanparte

    aidanparte Formula 3

    Jul 18, 2004
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    I think the gas tank was dry!
     
  22. ed_and_tonny

    ed_and_tonny Karting

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    WOW - what a wonderful lesson - ALWAYS check the obvious 1st (been there - done that!)
     
  23. dstacy

    dstacy F1 World Champ
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    Well if it was really out of gas (anyone notice that he hasn't denied this) then I've got at least a week's worth of material stored up to tease you with Aaron.

    :D

    Glad she's running again.

    You know that knocking sound you thought you could hear a while back? You might want to check the oil (just couldn't help it)
     
  24. bergxu

    bergxu Formula 3

    Aug 16, 2005
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    Ok ok hardee har har you guys!!!

    Yes, the tank was dry. Jeez I feel like an idiot, but a happy idiot at that!

    Of course, now after swallowing $104.00 :0 worth of premium, my gas gauge is only showing 3/4 full, and I know she took a full 30 gallons.

    Cheers,
    Aaron
    '82 GTSi
    '83 400iA
     
  25. aidanparte

    aidanparte Formula 3

    Jul 18, 2004
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    Aaron

    At least you are man enough to admit it.

    Aidan
     

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