1996 LS400 Dies on long trips.
#1
1996 LS400 Dies on long trips.
I've had my LS for a while now and I have had this problem a few times since I bought it.
Basicaly whats happening is on a long journey say, an hour or so at 100km/h (60miles)
I will come to an intersection or somewhere that requires me to stop and the car will
rev down and die. It restarts first pop without hesitation straight after and will drive fine.
It doesnt do it with around town driving ie lower speed.
Fuel comsumption seems normal to me. And the car never 'hunts' or rev's up and down on its own.
Seems odd to me that its completely fine 99% of the time. I have though it may be the MAF
but I'm not sure how to test it.
Any suggestions?
Basicaly whats happening is on a long journey say, an hour or so at 100km/h (60miles)
I will come to an intersection or somewhere that requires me to stop and the car will
rev down and die. It restarts first pop without hesitation straight after and will drive fine.
It doesnt do it with around town driving ie lower speed.
Fuel comsumption seems normal to me. And the car never 'hunts' or rev's up and down on its own.
Seems odd to me that its completely fine 99% of the time. I have though it may be the MAF
but I'm not sure how to test it.
Any suggestions?
#4
Not really something I wanted to hear. They arent commonly seen in the scrap yards over here. I'd have more luck finding rocking horse **** localy to be honest.
Does it have any other symptoms?
Since I dont drive long distance very often can I carry on as is until I can find a replacement?
Does it have any other symptoms?
Since I dont drive long distance very often can I carry on as is until I can find a replacement?
#6
I' vd got the same problem, with the same sympthoms. Turning on the AC a minute before coming up to that stop helps.
There are also places in the US that can update the ECU for some $150 or so. On the webpage that I read they claim that they do the job in one day and the rest is up to the shipping companies.
Also, you don't damage anything as such if you don't fix it. The only danger is if you suddenly find yourself rolling at 20-30 miles/hour into e.g. a heavily trafficked roundabout without the engine running thus having no power-steering, nor power-brakes.
//Björn
There are also places in the US that can update the ECU for some $150 or so. On the webpage that I read they claim that they do the job in one day and the rest is up to the shipping companies.
Also, you don't damage anything as such if you don't fix it. The only danger is if you suddenly find yourself rolling at 20-30 miles/hour into e.g. a heavily trafficked roundabout without the engine running thus having no power-steering, nor power-brakes.
//Björn
Last edited by edtbjon; 09-26-11 at 08:25 AM. Reason: Added the last paragraph
#7
Also, I'm in New Zealand so I'm not that keen sending it over your way just yet.
I'll keep an eye out on ebay and the like and see if anything pops up. If not I might just go aftermarket management.
Thanks for the help.
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#9
Change/flush the transmission fluid. The torque converter lockup clutch will stick causing the engine to spin down and die at a stop after a while on the road. The clutch never disengages. Once this happens, it will be fine until you put it in that position again. It feels like a standard trans that you never take out of gear or press the clutch when coming to a stop. Changing the fluid has worked for me most of the time. However, I have had to replace the TC before.
#11
Replacing TC would be the last thing. The ECU problem was a programming issue with the idle speed control valve logic. It would die before coming to a stop. It was only on 95's as I recall.
#14
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Check the EGR valve and see if it's sticky or staying open. This is usually caused by an EGR that after a long continuous drive stays open, then you pull up to a stop or get off an exit ramp and the valve stays open leans out the mixture and kills the engine. After you restart it the valve closes and the car runs perfect again. Thats where I would start.
#15
BahHumBug
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Check the EGR valve and see if it's sticky or staying open. This is usually caused by an EGR that after a long continuous drive stays open, then you pull up to a stop or get off an exit ramp and the valve stays open leans out the mixture and kills the engine. After you restart it the valve closes and the car runs perfect again. Thats where I would start.