- Jun 30, 2004
- 15,936
- 1,581
- 126
Yes, you have known for about five or six years that I am obsessed with this old, orphaned '95 SUV.
And people who are OCD about their vehicles may take some little thing, expand it in their imagination and worry or fret about it without end!
Couple weeks ago, I took her in to my Solid Gold repair shop, having laid the groundwork for the visit over more than a year. First, I wanted to replace the gas-tank sending unit that informs the needle gauge and an idiot light ("tank-empty") on my instrument-panel/dashboard. I found the original part brand-new in ISUZU carton through the US ISUZU parts depot, who found it in a warehouse in Japan. For $135, I had to wait three months, but I got it. I planned with the service advisor, who provided an estimate, to do it this spring.
And before I took it in for the work, I thought I noticed a "hard-starting" situation to which I'd not paid attention before. Since the sensor replacement meant removing the gas-tank, and a new fuel-pump ($150) required the same thing, we all decided the Trooper deserved it after 200,000 miles.
The car was returned to me. The idiot light was behaving properly. And the vehicle ran like new. [It just occurred to me I posted another thread about this, so I apologize]. BUT -- ANYWAY!
The owner and service advisor both affirmed that the Trooper "just starts right up -- no problem". The car had been sitting for a few hours when I went to pick it up, and they seemed absolutely spot-on -- "It starts right up!" Now, later on, I discovered that this was always the case when the engine was cold. Further, if I returned home, turned the car off in the garage, waited FIVE MINUTES or so and then turned the key again -- it started right up! Great! Now I've discovered that if you let the car sit for 20 minutes to an hour or so, the starter would crank for about 10 seconds -- maybe more -- if you tried to start it.
Pumping the gas or hitting the accelerator once or twice before turning the key seemed to reduce that time.
It seems to be a vapor-lock situation. Just after the car has been driven, some part of the fuel line is still cool from the car's movement. After it sits, there is no draft from the fan, no air coming through the radiator -- and it heats up before it cools off.
This may have been a condition for the entire time I've owned the car -- I can't be sure. But what can be done about it? Should I try and insulate gas hoses or lines running to the engine? I discovered today that putting a fan on the engine after putting the car in the garage eliminates this starting delay if I come back and turn the key in less than an hour.
And people who are OCD about their vehicles may take some little thing, expand it in their imagination and worry or fret about it without end!
Couple weeks ago, I took her in to my Solid Gold repair shop, having laid the groundwork for the visit over more than a year. First, I wanted to replace the gas-tank sending unit that informs the needle gauge and an idiot light ("tank-empty") on my instrument-panel/dashboard. I found the original part brand-new in ISUZU carton through the US ISUZU parts depot, who found it in a warehouse in Japan. For $135, I had to wait three months, but I got it. I planned with the service advisor, who provided an estimate, to do it this spring.
And before I took it in for the work, I thought I noticed a "hard-starting" situation to which I'd not paid attention before. Since the sensor replacement meant removing the gas-tank, and a new fuel-pump ($150) required the same thing, we all decided the Trooper deserved it after 200,000 miles.
The car was returned to me. The idiot light was behaving properly. And the vehicle ran like new. [It just occurred to me I posted another thread about this, so I apologize]. BUT -- ANYWAY!
The owner and service advisor both affirmed that the Trooper "just starts right up -- no problem". The car had been sitting for a few hours when I went to pick it up, and they seemed absolutely spot-on -- "It starts right up!" Now, later on, I discovered that this was always the case when the engine was cold. Further, if I returned home, turned the car off in the garage, waited FIVE MINUTES or so and then turned the key again -- it started right up! Great! Now I've discovered that if you let the car sit for 20 minutes to an hour or so, the starter would crank for about 10 seconds -- maybe more -- if you tried to start it.
Pumping the gas or hitting the accelerator once or twice before turning the key seemed to reduce that time.
It seems to be a vapor-lock situation. Just after the car has been driven, some part of the fuel line is still cool from the car's movement. After it sits, there is no draft from the fan, no air coming through the radiator -- and it heats up before it cools off.
This may have been a condition for the entire time I've owned the car -- I can't be sure. But what can be done about it? Should I try and insulate gas hoses or lines running to the engine? I discovered today that putting a fan on the engine after putting the car in the garage eliminates this starting delay if I come back and turn the key in less than an hour.