[Syty] Passed emissions test, but why?
Peter
technowizard at prodigy.net
Sat Jan 14 19:14:36 CST 2006
Dennis,
Thanks for the insight. I think few readers will disagree with anything you've said.
Since I don't have a hood scoop, I do like the 160F thermostat for keeping things just a bit cooler under the hood for the general benefit of the components as well as performance. If I do ever get a vented hood, I would look for one with the opening at the front instead of at the windshield, since the windshield is a high pressure area and actually flows in the reverse direction when at speed.
One person responded with the possibility that at 160F, the engine might think it is not fully warmed up and will deliberately idle rich. He mentioned that normally we assume a rich mxiture would make the converter run hotter. I'm not sure that applies at idle. I have heard of engine controls programmed to intentionally run extra fuel to cool the converter during extended idle longer than 45 seconds. Where I read this, they mentioned the emissions test will pass the idle portion if either the idle at the beginning or at the end of the test pass. Sometimes the idle at the beginning will be screwed up by the extended idling in line.
Unless you know enough to idle at 1500 to 2000 rpm while waiting for your turn on the treadmill. Then hope they don't take too long testing the gas cap.
Anyway, do you think the rich idle theory could be a plausible component of the 160/195F emissions delta?
Peter
DOlivares <seravilo at netzero.net> wrote:
It's "basic" thermodynamics! The HOTTER the cylinder-inlet temperature of the (hopefully) oxygen-rich air and gasoline mist, the higher will be the peak cylinder pressure/temperature after combustion. Hotter inlet-fuel/air temperature, i.e., "initial conditions" from your ol' physics days, is the near-exclusive function of cylinder-wall/head-temps and thus the hotter thermostat you run the better your emissions (and gas mileage) up to the point where the safety/reliability/drivability algorithms in your ECM will start backing-out ignition-advance, enrich the mixture (injectors' pulse-width) or whatever to prevent piston-meltdown, radical preignition or some other illusory fatality that almost never happens if you've kept your motor in good shape and done your build-up homework correctly.
The trade-off for "running hot" goes beyond simply trying to outfox your onboard computer (which is why I got into chip-reprogramming years ago...) and includes dealing with harsh realities. For example, running high underhood temps will degrade your plastics and rubbers (!) at an accelerated rate, especially after hard-run summer heat-soaks without a hood-scoop for venting. (On the other hand, you can roast weenies-- even your own if you're not careful-- with that car-heater set on High!) Elevated intake-manifold/filter/pipe temperatures also tend to offset all that nice, cold, oxygen-dense air you went through all that trouble to ram-in from outside that hostile underhood environment-- not optimal for peak-power production and racing. High-heat/lean-burn conditions also drives up NOx emissions, which used to be a don't-care (and which is why I got away with so many emisso-tricks in Virginia years ago!) but may now place a hard-limit on how low you want to drive your CO and
unburned-HC readings in "sensitive" jurisdictions such as yours appears to be....
This topic is quite a bit more complex than I'm letting on, but you got your basic answer, I hope. Even I could find fault with nearly everything I said above, depending on context and circumstances! But then, I like arguing with myself best of all... helps keep me young at heart.
And now that I've pulled the pin, let's see what colorful responses (and the usual personal attacks... from the usual Peanut Gallery) this Grenade provokes! I can almost predict what I'll see....
Your Faithful Servant
---------------------------------
----- Original Message ----- From: Peter
To: syty
Sent: Saturday, January 14, 2006 9:34 AM
Subject: [Syty] Passed emissions test, but why?
Why does thermostat temperature have so large an influence on passing emissions?
Twice now my Ty has failed emissions testing here in St. Louis, just barely failing HC, NOx, and CO. The third attempt followed swapping the 160F thermostat for a 195F thermostat. It "quick passed" with emissions at about 10% of the allowable limit.
Exact same story as the last test two years ago.
I presume the catalytic converter was not firing up with the 160F and came alive with the 195. So why does the thermostat influence exhaust gas temperature so much?
Or is there another emissions control mechanism at work?
Best regards,
Peter
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