Hoesgottaeat2
Full Access Member
Good morning folks,
Been driving my '99 Hoe problem free since putting her back on the road for the season on April 1st. Until last Friday...
I came home from work and parked her. A couple hours later came out to take mama out to dinner and upon startup the engine sounded rough, suspecting a misfire. No SES light at the moment so I drove it up the street, confident I would get an SES light to scan for. And within a few hundred feet the SES light illuminated and began flashing. I turned around and brought her back home to take a different vehicle out for the evening. But before we left in another vehicle I scanned the Hoe and got a P0300, random misfire. At that point I could begin thinking about how I'm going to attack it.
The next day, before I began tearing into things, I cold started the Hoe to be sure it wasn't an issue that's only evident when the engine is warm. Sure enough, an obvious misfire was still present. At that point I went out to my '96 Suburban which I drive in the winter only. During the summer that Burb becomes my parts vehicle as needed lol(seriously). I removed the distributor cap from the Burb and swapped it into the Hoe and voila, the engine was running perfectly again. I cleared the SES light with my scanner and left the Hoe parked in the barn for the weekend. Problem solved, right?
Well, the Hoe stayed parked for the weekend. I did not drive it after the fix until off to work Monday morning(yesterday). Upon coming to my first stop sign about 1/4 mile up the road I had to give her a bit more brake as the idle was stuck up around 1500 rpm. That was the only time it did that. From that point on I have driven it nearly 100 miles with several warm and cold starts and it never did that since. This baffled me as I never experienced that one after a repair like this. And believe me I have made that type of repair several times over the years, this being the 4th Suburban/Tahoe I have owned of this generation.
Knowing all that, my question is this...why the high idle after that repair? Is it possible there was a relearn after I reset the monitors with my scanner? That's the only thing that remotely makes sense to me here at the moment.
Thanks for your input. I really do love this place.
- Nick
Been driving my '99 Hoe problem free since putting her back on the road for the season on April 1st. Until last Friday...
I came home from work and parked her. A couple hours later came out to take mama out to dinner and upon startup the engine sounded rough, suspecting a misfire. No SES light at the moment so I drove it up the street, confident I would get an SES light to scan for. And within a few hundred feet the SES light illuminated and began flashing. I turned around and brought her back home to take a different vehicle out for the evening. But before we left in another vehicle I scanned the Hoe and got a P0300, random misfire. At that point I could begin thinking about how I'm going to attack it.
The next day, before I began tearing into things, I cold started the Hoe to be sure it wasn't an issue that's only evident when the engine is warm. Sure enough, an obvious misfire was still present. At that point I went out to my '96 Suburban which I drive in the winter only. During the summer that Burb becomes my parts vehicle as needed lol(seriously). I removed the distributor cap from the Burb and swapped it into the Hoe and voila, the engine was running perfectly again. I cleared the SES light with my scanner and left the Hoe parked in the barn for the weekend. Problem solved, right?
Well, the Hoe stayed parked for the weekend. I did not drive it after the fix until off to work Monday morning(yesterday). Upon coming to my first stop sign about 1/4 mile up the road I had to give her a bit more brake as the idle was stuck up around 1500 rpm. That was the only time it did that. From that point on I have driven it nearly 100 miles with several warm and cold starts and it never did that since. This baffled me as I never experienced that one after a repair like this. And believe me I have made that type of repair several times over the years, this being the 4th Suburban/Tahoe I have owned of this generation.
Knowing all that, my question is this...why the high idle after that repair? Is it possible there was a relearn after I reset the monitors with my scanner? That's the only thing that remotely makes sense to me here at the moment.
Thanks for your input. I really do love this place.
- Nick