Still plugging away at the CQ...
Had to get her off the ground for new front springs, so I thought I'd give these wheels a go.
Interior is shaping up.
I added an OEM cabin filter. Since these didn't come with a lid and the correct filters don't seem to be available, I might try to make some sort frame that will secure the filter a little better.
I am still fighting some issues with how she's running though. I've heat cycled it quite a few times, as I am flushing out the coolant system. When I start the car, it idles good at about 1,000 RPMs. After a few minutes, it starts to hunt between 1000 and 600. I've spent a lot of time looking for boost leaks and have found and fixed quite a few. I'm down to a couple small leaks...one around the throttle body boot and one on the ISV, but I do not think they would cause the issues I am experiencing.
I took it for a drive and it was bucking quite a bit under light throttle, not even into the boost yet. It feels like a loss of fuel to me.
I'm pretty sure I have some wiring gremlins in the harness that runs along the driver side (left) of the car. I suspect this is all some carryover from this mess I found a while back.
- When cranking or with the car running, my turn signal lights come on.
- With the car running, if I flip on the headlights, the car will die.
- The fuel sender signal to the instrument cluster gets lost when I turn on the headlights or step on the brakes.
As I was digging through the wiring diagrams, I noticed several of the circuits that are are having issues are on the H plug on the bottom of the relay panel. The H plug runs to the rear of the car.
- H87F G/Y - from fuse S13 to fuel pump
- H50w BK/BL - from relay 8 #39 to alarm control unit
- H30B R/BL - from fuse S4 to hatch light
- HT V/BK - fuel sending unit
- H58L GY/BK - from fuse S7 to rear lamp control unit 8b/5 (left side)
- H58R GY/R - from fuse S6 to rear lamp control unit 8b/6 (right side)
I need to get some time in the shop to check the voltage at the fuel pump to see if it's low on power or loosing power when I turn on the headlights. In the end, I might need to cut out a section of this wiring harness and solder in new wires.