I had to start a few vehicles this past week that spend much of their time 
sitting around. They were "second" vehicles, used only occasionally for 
everyday
transportation. Some of them started fine but ran a little rough. Others 
misfired during cranking and ran very rough for several seconds when 
started,
and one would not start at all. What did they all have in common? Dirty fuel 
injectors.

Fuel injection has done wonders for starting engines easily. Most engines 
will start almost as soon as the key is turned. This happens because the 
injectors
spray the fuel in a fine mist into the intake manifold runners so that the 
fuel vapourizes almost immediately. Remember, liquid fuel doesn't burn. It's
the vapours that burn, and the finer the spray pattern from the injectors, 
the quicker it turns to vapour.

Dirty injectors don't give a fine, even spray pattern. They may spray more 
fuel in one direction than the other. They may spray fuel in a little 
stream,
they may not close completely and so drip fuel continuously, or they may not 
open at all. That's what happened to the vehicle that wouldn't start: the
fuel injectors were stuck shut. On the other vehicles, the air-fuel mixture 
to each cylinder wasn't even, and so some cylinders were getting too much 
fuel
and others were not getting enough. This can cause cylinders to misfire.

When a cylinder misfires, the oxygen in that cylinder is not used for 
combustion, so it goes out the exhaust pipe on the next exhaust stroke.

The oxygen sensors measure this unused oxygen and the computer reacts as if 
the engine is running extremely lean. Then the fuel injection computer adds
fuel to all the cylinders by turning the injectors on longer. This causes 
even those cylinders that were running fine to run too rich, making the 
engine
operate worse. One problem leads to more. The original problem, the dirty 
injectors, must be fixed first.

Our fuel is usually clean and there are filters on the vehicle's fuel system 
to trap dirt, so how do the injectors get dirty? The filters trap dirt from
10 to 30 microns in size - a micron being only a millionth of an inch, which 
means pretty small pieces of dirt. Even so, at slow engine speeds there is
not a lot of fuel flowing through the injectors and some particles can 
become lodged at the valve in the spray nozzle tip. Sometimes, a few 
full-throttle
acceleration runs from low speed to highway speed will flush out the dirt 
deposits.

Sometimes the injectors stick or become dirty because a gummy deposit has 
built up in the spray nozzle. When the engine is shut off, the fuel 
evaporates
on the tip of the injector. The "high ends" evaporate first, leaving a gum 
residue behind. Running the engine will sometimes flush these deposits away.
Usually however, a little chemical help is needed.

Many fuel companies advertise their fuel-cleaning additives. Some premium 
fuels do contain more cleaners than regular fuels and help keep injectors 
clean,
but even most regular fuels contains some cleaners.

There are also many aftermarket additives for sale at any auto parts store. 
I have tried many of them and still don't have any favourites. They all seem
to work, but follow the directions carefully. Typically, the additive 
manufacturers will recommend one container of cleaner to a full tank of 
fuel. If
you add too much chemical cleaner, it may damage some of the rubber parts in 
the fuel system. More isn't necessarily better.

The best injector cleaning is done at service shops. To check injector 
condition, a technician connects a fuel pressure gauge, momentarily 
energizes the
fuel pump, and then operates each injector. The drop in pressure for each 
injector is measured. If they are all close or equal, everything is good. If
there is a difference, the injectors need cleaning. This is an "injector 
flush".

To clean the injectors, the technician will disconnect the fuel injector 
lines from the rest of the system at the engine and connect another tank, 
containing
concentrated cleaning solution, to the engine. He will then operate the 
engine for several minutes on the concentrated cleaner solution. This 
usually cleans
the injectors and also cleans carbon off the back side of the intake valves 
to allow the air-fuel mixture to enter the cylinders better.

Injectors that don't work properly after cleaning need to be replaced.

There are shops that specialize in cleaning the injectors off the vehicle. 
This is more expensive and doesn't always work, and the injectors may need 
to
be replaced anyway.

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