Weber Dude
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- Joined
- Dec 6, 2015
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Just saw this post and it looks like it's the same deal I went through in May 2015 with my 2001 Silverado 5.3 4x4. Had I done the smog test a week earlier I would have passed according to the smog tech. That's because the testing requirements had changed.
So with my truck, I originally took it to a smog and go place and it didn't pass smog because, they said there was no data and that an air pump was bad. So, I took it over to the local 76 Station that had a shop and performed SMOG tests. The first time they said was to drive it for a couple days and come back and it should be good. Well, still no data logged. They went through some more tests and ended up changing one of my aftermarket O2 sensors. Drove it for a week, took it back and still nothing.
During that week, their main nerd SMOG tech did some research to find out what was needed for things to record. What was posted previously looks very similar to what he said needed to be performed. But the first thing he did was hook it up to the machine and see if anything logged and if it passes. Nothing. The tech asked if I had an hour or so to wait; he wanted to try something different since the data that needed to be logged required very specific conditions. I said sure. He drove my truck up on their dyno, put a fan on the engine to cool it down to the proper temp per the parameters (140-145) listed. Once there, he jumped in the truck, drove it at the speed listed for 3 or so minutes with a specific amount of load. Long story short, the data logged and the truck passed.
Hopefully this helps. Kinda glad I had a nerd SMOG tech that wanted to try something out of the box other than just hook it up to a machine.
So with my truck, I originally took it to a smog and go place and it didn't pass smog because, they said there was no data and that an air pump was bad. So, I took it over to the local 76 Station that had a shop and performed SMOG tests. The first time they said was to drive it for a couple days and come back and it should be good. Well, still no data logged. They went through some more tests and ended up changing one of my aftermarket O2 sensors. Drove it for a week, took it back and still nothing.
During that week, their main nerd SMOG tech did some research to find out what was needed for things to record. What was posted previously looks very similar to what he said needed to be performed. But the first thing he did was hook it up to the machine and see if anything logged and if it passes. Nothing. The tech asked if I had an hour or so to wait; he wanted to try something different since the data that needed to be logged required very specific conditions. I said sure. He drove my truck up on their dyno, put a fan on the engine to cool it down to the proper temp per the parameters (140-145) listed. Once there, he jumped in the truck, drove it at the speed listed for 3 or so minutes with a specific amount of load. Long story short, the data logged and the truck passed.
Hopefully this helps. Kinda glad I had a nerd SMOG tech that wanted to try something out of the box other than just hook it up to a machine.