The following is an excerpt from http://www.findarticles.com/p/articl...02/ai_n8837187
A 1991-93 Chevrolet Lumina, Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme or Pontiac Grand Prix with the 3.4-liter Twin D O H C V6 (VIN X) may show up in your shop with the owner complaining of phantom stalls during parking lot maneuvers when the throttle is closed and there are high loads on the engine from the power steering system and possibly the a/c. Problem for you is, the engine always restarts immediately, so how can you duplicate the conditions? You can't.
But if there doesn't seem to be anything else wrong with the car, know that GM has come up with new fuel injectors (Part No. 25170699) that flow richer at lower pulse widths to solve this problem. Before installing the six new injectors, though, go over the minimum air rate setting and the power steering pressure switch with a fine-tooth comb. Also, make sure the PCM has the latest calibration software installed. That should do it for the '91s to '93s.
MY QUESTIONS ARE: (I have a 1991 Z34 Lumina 3.4L)
1. Is there any way other than having to buy these new GM fuel injectors to solve the "phantom stalling" problem?
2. When above states... go over minimum air rate setting, can I adjust this for more fuel to go in to stop the low speed stalling?
3. How and where do I get the "PCM's latest calibration software".
4. Does Ben have a new ECU with a chip installed that will raise the stock idle so the engine will not stall at low speeds?
Thanks in advance for any input, Tom.
A 1991-93 Chevrolet Lumina, Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme or Pontiac Grand Prix with the 3.4-liter Twin D O H C V6 (VIN X) may show up in your shop with the owner complaining of phantom stalls during parking lot maneuvers when the throttle is closed and there are high loads on the engine from the power steering system and possibly the a/c. Problem for you is, the engine always restarts immediately, so how can you duplicate the conditions? You can't.
But if there doesn't seem to be anything else wrong with the car, know that GM has come up with new fuel injectors (Part No. 25170699) that flow richer at lower pulse widths to solve this problem. Before installing the six new injectors, though, go over the minimum air rate setting and the power steering pressure switch with a fine-tooth comb. Also, make sure the PCM has the latest calibration software installed. That should do it for the '91s to '93s.
MY QUESTIONS ARE: (I have a 1991 Z34 Lumina 3.4L)
1. Is there any way other than having to buy these new GM fuel injectors to solve the "phantom stalling" problem?
2. When above states... go over minimum air rate setting, can I adjust this for more fuel to go in to stop the low speed stalling?
3. How and where do I get the "PCM's latest calibration software".
4. Does Ben have a new ECU with a chip installed that will raise the stock idle so the engine will not stall at low speeds?
Thanks in advance for any input, Tom.
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