maxwellp wrote:
If your problem goes away good. But I would not leave the flow control valve butterfly out for good. The FCV closes on shut down for a smooth shut down. This will also and more importantly help stop a runaway engine by choking off the air and shutting it down. With out it in the event of a runaway the engine will only stop if the air or fuel source is removed. By the time you do the that the engine already ate itself. I have seen it and the aftermath.
Sorry, I don't think so. The FCV is commanded to close based on the direction by the computer. How exactly would the computer know that the engine is in runaway, which by definition means that the engine is operating on another fuel source, such as its own oil? It cannot. I do not believe that it does anything to "soften" the shutdown because my CRD shuts off exactly the same now as it did before. Where I think everyone's belief that the FCV does something at shutdown (because of the noise of the motor after the engine stops) is because you wouldn't normally be shutting the engine off while at high load. At lesser load, the EGR system is liable to be employed, which also can engage the FCV. If you have a GDE tune, this is not the case, but in all situations, the following is true:
How can the ECU know when you are about to shut the engine off and activate that FCV before the fuel itself is cut off? Stopping the fuel flow is an elec`tronic signal, it happens instantly, and the compression pressure will stop the pistons within 1 revolution. I would contend even faster - Whichever piston is entering the compression stroke is the "brake" that stops the motor. In all cases, the engine stops rotation EXTREMELY quickly. Like within that one compression stroke, because you don't hear the engine releasing pressure. Can the electric motor of the FCV, fighting against that strong spring, move 90 degrees to fully closed in 1/4 second? I seriously doubt it!
At the same time, what purpose would this serve to "soften" anything about the shutdown? The cylinders will be doing their thing, one will be in compression, valves closed. The air in that cylinder cannot be affected by the FCV. The ONLY cylinder that MIGHT be affected is the one on the intake stroke... And what difference will creating a sudden vacuum in the intake make to stopping the engine? The volumetric size of the entire intake is much larger than just the volume of one cylinder... So it won't be a true vacuum, it will be more like a low-pressure-but-still-has-air situation. I don't see that changing anything.
Can someone please examine this and try to explain how it does work, if you believe that I am wrong on this? I seriously do not see how it can do anything with regard to the shutdown. I heard the same kind of suggestions on the TDI forums about the "EGR flapper" on those engines.... And the shutdown there was EXACTLY the same both with and without it on my Jetta. (FYI: That "FCV" device was vacuum controlled, not electric)