Thanks for the post Jake
Higher RPM in neutral results in a lot more smoke so raising idle won't help.
I've wanted a compression & leak-down test for a while lately, but 935racer has the testers and we haven't had too much time in the shop. 935racer, how about we do it this Saturday?
My engine idles very smoothly, it starts misfiring if you rev it in neutral above 1,100 RPM or as soon as the vehicle accelerates off idle, especially at part-throttle. Despite the smooth idle I guess there still may be improper combustion based on the 300-400 EGT.
Perhaps I should note that I do not have a cold-start pull. I have a 650amp battery and a small gasser starter (transmission is from a 1.8L 8v) but the engine fires to life after 1 or 2 cranks in -4 degree C (24 degree F) weather after sitting overnight. Starts great, but immediately after startup if I hold WOT the engine cannot rev on its own, until 10-15 secs later. Perhaps that's another indicator of low compression?
Anyway I just ordered an OEM cold-start pull that fits in my MK3 dashboard. $28.78. Of course it won't be the ultimate solution, but I may just need a little advanced timing.
When 935racer pulled my 1.9 head, he also replaced the thermostat at my request. I don't recall what temp it is, my last thermostat was 87 degrees C (188 F). I'll ask him what the temp rating is, but the temp according to my water temp gauge is 185 degrees usually.
My oil temp gauge is the only gauge that's not functional. I've visted two auto parts shops for fittings for both oil pressure and oil temp sensors on the 1.9TD head, but they didn't have the proper fittings :evil:. I'm going to visit another this Saturday.
If you feel so inclined... now would be a good time to experiment with ceramic coatings on any or all of the aluminum surfaces of the combustion chamber and piston tops.
If that's the case I'll likely wait until I get a temporary daily driver and leave the TD parked until 935racer gets a ceramic coater.
Another thought - if your glow plugs being turned on during idling solved the situation, you might be able to do something to wire them to go on whenever the RPMs dropped below a certain point.
Good idea. I can get one of my friends to build a switch based on the RPM signal coming from the "W" terminal on the alternator. I drive in traffic a lot on a daily basis, will the glow plugs last long? Does it say somewhere how many continous hours they're rated for?
Glow plugs didn't completely cut my smoke, it just reduced it. If the engine is revved in neutral with or without glow plugs, there'll still be a big plume of white smoke. I already failed Aircare (emissions) with the glow plugs active throughout the test. They repeatedly revved the engine pretty high as part of the idle test, but I normally don't do that in traffic.
Coming up:
Compression #s
Leakdown #s
Oil temp #s