myvento.net
Welcome, Guest
Please Login or Register.    Lost Password?
RX200 (1 viewing) (1) Guest
Go to bottom Post Reply Favoured: 0
TOPIC: RX200
#17622
scottyb159 (User)
Junior Boarder
Posts: 22
graphgraph
User Offline Click here to see the profile of this user
RX200 Problems 2 Years ago Karma: 0  
Hi all, been a while. All had been good for a while and today I had a problem with my rx200. It is sputtering when I accelerate. Almost to the point of jerking so hard that I feel it will stall or throw me off. It got a little colder here in NY today, but not so cold that I would think it would matter. Any help???
 
Report to moderator   Logged Logged  
  The administrator has disabled public write access.
#19008
splashd (User)
Fresh Boarder
Posts: 19
graphgraph
User Offline Click here to see the profile of this user
Re: RX200 Problems 1 Year, 6 Months ago Karma: 0  
My first thought would be to ask if you\'re running premium, like you\'re supposed to...
 
Report to moderator   Logged Logged  
  The administrator has disabled public write access.
#19009
Sporty (User)
Platinum Boarder
Posts: 1253
graph
User Offline Click here to see the profile of this user
RX200 1 Year, 6 Months ago Karma: 1  
Make sure your carb hoses and clamps are all tight, You don\'t need premium gas, That stuff is for Hi-Perf engines with high compression ratios. You should use low or mid grade. Drain the carb and let the gas settle and look for water drops in the bottom of the container, You way have got some bad gas.
Paul aka Sporty

>> http:// auto.howstuffworks.c om/question90.htm

If you\'ve read How Car Engines Work, you know that almost all cars use four-stroke gasoline engines. One of the strokes is the compression stroke, where the engine compresses a cylinder-full of air and gas into a much smaller volume before igniting it with a spark plug. The amount of compression is called the compression ratio of the engine. A typical engine might have a compression ratio of 8-to-1. (See How Car Engines Work for details.)

The octane rating of gasoline tells you how much the fuel can be compressed before it spontaneously ignites. When gas ignites by compression rather than because of the spark from the spark plug, it causes knocking in the engine. Knocking can damage an engine, so it is not something you want to have happening. Lower-octane gas (like "regular" 87-octane gasoline) can handle the least amount of compression before igniting.

The compression ratio of your engine determines the octane rating of the gas you must use in the car. One way to increase the horsepower of an engine of a given displacement is to increase its compression ratio. So a "high- performance engine" has a higher compression ratio and requires higher-octane fuel. The advantage of a high compression ratio is that it gives your engine a higher horsepower rating for a given engine weight -- that is what makes the engine "high performance." The disadvantage is that the gasoline for your engine costs more.

The name "octane" comes from the following fact: When you take crude oil and "crack" it in a refinery, you end up getting hydrocarbon chains of different lengths. These different chain lengths can then be separated from each other and blended to form different fuels. For example, you may have heard of methane, propane and butane. All three of them are hydrocarbons. Methane has just a single carbon atom. Propane has three carbon atoms chained together. Butane has four carbon atoms chained together. Pentane has five, hexane has six, heptane has seven and octane has eight carbons chained together.

It turns out that heptane handles compression very poorly. Compress it just a little and it ignites spontaneously. Octane handles compression very well -- you can compress it a lot and nothing happens. Eighty-seven-octane gasoline is gasoline that contains 87-percent octane and 13-percent heptane (or some other combination of fuels that has the same performance of the 87/13 combination of octane/heptane). It spontaneously ignites at a given compression level, and can only be used in engines that do not exceed that compression ratio.

During WWI, it was discovered that you can add a chemical called tetraethyl lead (TEL) to gasoline and significantly improve its octane rating above the octane/heptane combination. Cheaper grades of gasoline could be made usable by adding TEL. This led to the widespread use of "ethyl" or "leaded" gasoline. Unfortunately, the side effects of adding lead to gasoline are:

* Lead clogs a catalytic converter and renders it inoperable within minutes.
* The Earth became covered in a thin layer of lead, and lead is toxic to many living things (including humans).

When lead was banned, gasoline got more expensive because refineries could not boost the octane ratings of cheaper grades any more. Airplanes are still allowed to use leaded gasoline (known as AvGas), and octane ratings of 100 or more are commonly used in super-high- performance piston airplane engines. In the case of AvGas, 100 is the gasoline\'s performance rating, not the percentage of actual octane in the gas. The addition of TEL boosts the compression level of the gasoline -- it doesn\'t add more octane.

Currently engineers are trying to develop airplane engines that can use unleaded gasoline. Jet engines burn kerosene, by the way.
 
Report to moderator   Logged Logged  
  The administrator has disabled public write access.
Go to top Post Reply
Powered by FireBoardget the latest posts directly to your desktop
    

Online Users

No Users Online

Random Image

Most Popular Threads

  1. Two or Four Stroke? (1617 views)
  2. Decarbonnizing the muffler (1368 views)
  3. Vento Triton R3 (1295 views)
  4. I think I found my stalling problem 07 Triton (1127 views)
  5. Adventure SunL LongBo 150cc (1069 views)

Login