inmanlanier
Getting familiar with the group...
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2011
- Messages
- 200
- Reaction score
- 54
- Points
- 28
- Location
- Palm Beach Gardens, FL
- Genesis Model Type
- 2G Genesis Sedan (2015-2016)
In my case I'll never know what was going since they didn't tell me what they did.
Based on than my many years dealing with cars (building motors, tuning carbs, learning FI system logic, racing cars, troubleshooting, etc.) it always comes back to the basics - spark or fuel. With today's systems, a myriad of causes can cause problems with either. It doesn't change the symptoms, however - you have some missing spark, or you have too little or too much fuel.
In my case with this particular issue (and others in the past) the smell of the exhaust was quite rich (i.e. raw unburned fuel). I'm highly confident I had a stuck injector because it was so rich in smell.
If you have the same symptoms you don't want to drive it around like this for any extended periods of time because the excess unburned fuel will wash down the oil film on the cylinder walls that keeps all lubricated well. I remember a different post a while back where the injector leakage was so high, after shutting down the motor - enough fuel got in one of the cylinders to hydraulic lock it (i.e. the liquid gas has a volume greater than the compressed cylinder volume at top dead center so the motor seizes). Not common, but things can break in those scenarios.
Sniff your exhaust - it is smells like fuel and you have white smoke, they need to figure out why (stuck injector one of the possible causes).
Based on than my many years dealing with cars (building motors, tuning carbs, learning FI system logic, racing cars, troubleshooting, etc.) it always comes back to the basics - spark or fuel. With today's systems, a myriad of causes can cause problems with either. It doesn't change the symptoms, however - you have some missing spark, or you have too little or too much fuel.
In my case with this particular issue (and others in the past) the smell of the exhaust was quite rich (i.e. raw unburned fuel). I'm highly confident I had a stuck injector because it was so rich in smell.
If you have the same symptoms you don't want to drive it around like this for any extended periods of time because the excess unburned fuel will wash down the oil film on the cylinder walls that keeps all lubricated well. I remember a different post a while back where the injector leakage was so high, after shutting down the motor - enough fuel got in one of the cylinders to hydraulic lock it (i.e. the liquid gas has a volume greater than the compressed cylinder volume at top dead center so the motor seizes). Not common, but things can break in those scenarios.
Sniff your exhaust - it is smells like fuel and you have white smoke, they need to figure out why (stuck injector one of the possible causes).