agent75 37 Report post Posted November 2, 2017 My '01 330i is having hot start issues. I have not experienced it but the missus has described it to me. Has to crank for more than 5 sec before starting after warm and sitting for a wee bit. Sounds like fuel vaporisation but open to suggestions. I will put a pressure tester on fuel rail but just thought I'd ask here first. Never stutters while driving, excellent power, still lovely to drive, oil and water always good. Is there something that keeps pressure in fuel rail that may have "fuct out" and could cause vapourisation. Poss injector leaking too?? Fly by wire so pressing accelerator when starting will achieve nothing right?? All input appreciated. Shane Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
emandru 17 Report post Posted November 2, 2017 sounds like potentially a leaky injector(s). When you shut the car off the fuel line and rail remain pressurized until next start, but if you have a leaky injector, the injector will drip fuel into cylinder essentially flooding it causing the harder start scenario you're describing. If you wait long enough (ie. cold start) the fuel that would have dripped into the cylinder would have evaporated and this starting like normal. To troubleshoot, you can remove the fuel rail from the engine with the injectors attached and still connected to the fuel line. Turn the ignition switch on but do not start the car and place paper towel under the fuel injectors. This will pressurize the fuel line and rail. If you have a leaky injector, you'll be able to see which one is leaking. Could always be something else but this is what i suspect. 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
agent75 37 Report post Posted November 3, 2017 22 hours ago, emandru said: sounds like potentially a leaky injector(s). When you shut the car off the fuel line and rail remain pressurized until next start, but if you have a leaky injector, the injector will drip fuel into cylinder essentially flooding it causing the harder start scenario you're describing. If you wait long enough (ie. cold start) the fuel that would have dripped into the cylinder would have evaporated and this starting like normal. To troubleshoot, you can remove the fuel rail from the engine with the injectors attached and still connected to the fuel line. Turn the ignition switch on but do not start the car and place paper towel under the fuel injectors. This will pressurize the fuel line and rail. If you have a leaky injector, you'll be able to see which one is leaking. Could always be something else but this is what i suspect. Very Much appreciated. I shall do some testing and keep you informed Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
agent75 37 Report post Posted November 3, 2017 On 11/2/2017 at 9:23 PM, emandru said: sounds like potentially a leaky injector(s). When you shut the car off the fuel line and rail remain pressurized until next start, but if you have a leaky injector, the injector will drip fuel into cylinder essentially flooding it causing the harder start scenario you're describing. If you wait long enough (ie. cold start) the fuel that would have dripped into the cylinder would have evaporated and this starting like normal. To troubleshoot, you can remove the fuel rail from the engine with the injectors attached and still connected to the fuel line. Turn the ignition switch on but do not start the car and place paper towel under the fuel injectors. This will pressurize the fuel line and rail. If you have a leaky injector, you'll be able to see which one is leaking. Could always be something else but this is what i suspect. I did this test tonight and couldn't see any leaking. I will try again tomorrow as too dark now. It is definitely losing pressure as far as I can see as I used pressure gauge and ten minutes later almost no pressure. My only other option may be the pressure regulator but that won't flood the car soo wouldn't cause issue unless fuel is vaporising more easily due to lower pressure in rail??? Hmmmm Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
emandru 17 Report post Posted November 3, 2017 hmmm youre right, a faulty pressure regulator wouldn't causing any flooding and would likely cause a rough idle afterwards also. I presume it idles fine after it starts up? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Olaf 3321 Report post Posted November 3, 2017 Fuel pump relay, or fuel pump. assuming your filter is good. that'd me my $0.02. I started with filter, then did relay. Still had intermittant hot start issue. AA man tapped tank - started. Replaced fuel pump, no issues since. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
agent75 37 Report post Posted November 3, 2017 Re checked and found one injector leaking - only a little but engine was cold etc so may leak more when warm. I replaced injector with spare so will see how that goes over the next week. Thanks for the input gents 44 minutes ago, Olaf said: Fuel pump relay, or fuel pump. assuming your filter is good. that'd me my $0.02. I started with filter, then did relay. Still had intermittant hot start issue. AA man tapped tank - started. Replaced fuel pump, no issues since. I think the filter and regulator are combined on my car... will see how new injector goes 1 hour ago, emandru said: hmmm youre right, a faulty pressure regulator wouldn't causing any flooding and would likely cause a rough idle afterwards also. I presume it idles fine after it starts up? Idles beautifully 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
agent75 37 Report post Posted November 8, 2017 Well, I experienced the hot start issue for the first time after my missus noticed it. As I have checked and replaced suspect injectors I am now turning my mind to cam / crank position sensors. I have some off the old engine so will try them. Firstly, does anyone have a code reader I could borrow for beers? I guess there may be some faults in there to avoid chasing my tail on this. Shane Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
agent75 37 Report post Posted November 11, 2017 Well, some great news which may be of benefit to others in my position. After some googling I decided it was crank or cam sensors. My work mate ended up having a reader so I plugged it in and ... boom! it was having an "intermittent intake cam sensor malfunction". replaced with one off the original engine and it went faultlessly like a cut cat. very happy and far less scared of electronic gubbins now. so google was right. I will post here if the problem persists but otherwise consider it solved! 1 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites