So, before I changed my head gasket, the way it used to run was when you got in and started it, it would idle up to about 1200 to 1500 rpm and then come down to about 7 or 800 after warming up. After I got the head gasket changed and put back together, it idles up to about 1500 and stays there. Is something not functioning properly? And even odder is when I'm turning and got the clutch in moving down a gear as I'm slowing, it will idle up and down likes theres a vaccum leak. I've checked all my hoses and they are all on. I suppose I could have a puncture in one but I don't know how it could be from when I'm slowing down and turning cause it doesn't happen when the car is at a stop. So I decided to experiment with the distributor. I know there is advanced and retarded. If we are looking at the driver side of the engine facing the distributor, I am going to assume that having it turned as far clockwise is advanced. Thats just the position I've always had it. When I decided to move it counter clock wise all the way, it started up and ran right at 700 rpm without having to come down. However, the car was even more of a wimp than it already is so I will assume that is retarded. Why would that bring the rpm level down? And I also don't hear it idling while in turns with the clutch in. Should the distributor be centered? I was told advancing the timing once the car is hot, it won't start but like I said, the timing has always been advanced and started fine.
If the engine is going to a high idle and staying there (or constantly switching between high and low), then that usually means there's an air-bubble in the cooling system, which stuffs up the cold-idle valve in the throttle body and causes the idle speed to fluctuate. Bleed the cooling system and see if the idle settles down properly
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Charlene - 1997 AE102 sedan: FXGT of awesome
Billie - 1981 KE55 sedan: GOOOONNNE
Rosie - 1986 AE82 Twincam Seca: Converted into garage space
Charlie - 1988 ST62 liftback: Moored in the garage
Lexi - 1995 JZZ30 GTTL: Hunting n00bs in Skylines and SS Commodores
Last edited by Hiro Protagonist; 10-22-2010 at 07:52 AM.
its a 91 corolla 1.6. 5 speed. 4age. how does one bleed the cooling system? I'm going to have to put antifreeze in it since there is only water at the moment and its getting cold again.
its a 91 corolla 1.6. 5 speed. 4age. how does one bleed the cooling system? I'm going to have to put antifreeze in it since there is only water at the moment and its getting cold again.
Easiest way to bleed the cooling system is to jack the front of the car up to make sure that the radiator cap is the highest point of the system (air bubbles naturally migrate to the highest point, which can easily be the throttle body cold-idle valve, causing the erratic idle), then run the engine with the radiator cap removed and the heater on hot (to open the heater tap fully). To speed up the process, you can tape an upside-down Coke bottle or the like to the radiator mouth with the bottom cut off, and add some coolant or water to the bottle - this adds hydraulic "head" to the system and will force the air bubbles out better (if you don't use the bottle, then the head difference between the throttle body and the radiator cap mightn't be enough to force the bubbles through).
You should only need to run the engine for a couple of minutes once it has warmed up to force the bubbles out - if the idle speed continues to be erratic afterwards then it most likely isn't an air-bubble problem.
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Charlene - 1997 AE102 sedan: FXGT of awesome
Billie - 1981 KE55 sedan: GOOOONNNE
Rosie - 1986 AE82 Twincam Seca: Converted into garage space
Charlie - 1988 ST62 liftback: Moored in the garage
Lexi - 1995 JZZ30 GTTL: Hunting n00bs in Skylines and SS Commodores
Easiest way to bleed the cooling system is to jack the front of the car up to make sure that the radiator cap is the highest point of the system (air bubbles naturally migrate to the highest point, which can easily be the throttle body cold-idle valve, causing the erratic idle), then run the engine with the radiator cap removed and the heater on hot (to open the heater tap fully). To speed up the process, you can tape an upside-down Coke bottle or the like to the radiator mouth with the bottom cut off, and add some coolant or water to the bottle - this adds hydraulic "head" to the system and will force the air bubbles out better (if you don't use the bottle, then the head difference between the throttle body and the radiator cap mightn't be enough to force the bubbles through).
You should only need to run the engine for a couple of minutes once it has warmed up to force the bubbles out - if the idle speed continues to be erratic afterwards then it most likely isn't an air-bubble problem.
How do you know when the air bubbles are out? Do I need to uscrew the little bleeder valve someone else mentioned?
How do you know when the air bubbles are out? Do I need to uscrew the little bleeder valve someone else mentioned?
You'll know when the air bubble comes out because, well, you'll get bubbles - they're fairly noticeable. And if the idle settles properly and stays there, then chances are you've got all the bubbles.
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Charlene - 1997 AE102 sedan: FXGT of awesome
Billie - 1981 KE55 sedan: GOOOONNNE
Rosie - 1986 AE82 Twincam Seca: Converted into garage space
Charlie - 1988 ST62 liftback: Moored in the garage
Lexi - 1995 JZZ30 GTTL: Hunting n00bs in Skylines and SS Commodores
Oh i get it now. We are trying to get the bubbles to the front to the radiator cap. How much water do these radiators in our little corollas hold? By December the temp around here will be down to single digits so I got to figure out the best mixture of antifreeze/water. Would 3 parts antifreeze and 1 part water be fine?
Easiest way is to buy the 50/50 mix. You just pour that in straight from the bottle, if it meets the temperature range for your region.
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'88 Corolla, AE92 SR-5, 7A-FE swap/GT-S suspension
'87 Corolla, AE82 FX-16, 4A-GZE swap (autocrosser)
'03 Tundra 4X4 Access Cab, (FX tow vehicle/Home Depot runner)
Modification: Changing something to what you thought it should have been from the start!
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