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#1
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like my title. is a faulty cold start valve responsible for a little longer start up time in the morning regardless of the weather outsude? My 560sel takes a bit of time to start up in the morning. on rare occasions it will not catch and i will have to try again. My 420sel is quick to start, doesnt take much time to start it. I have replaced the fuel filters on my 560sel already.
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2001 E55 2001 E320 Sedan 2001 Subaru Legacy 2006 SLK280 2016 Subaru Outback 3.6 |
#2
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The cold start valve really doensn't do much unless you live in a very cold climate. IMHO, I suspect that you you are losing residual fuel pressure while the car is at rest via leaky injectors, or you have a bad fuel accumaltor("Accumulator- Large spring loaded diaphragm to keep fuel pressure up with engine off, also dampens pulses from the pump"). I would put a set of guages on the car first and see what happens.
Let us know what happens. |
#3
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Though, on second thought if what I said in the above post were true it would happen all day long, not just in the morning when the car is stone cold. In that case you might have a weak "warm up regulator". If this is the case the car will start fine after it warms up, but will be hard to start only when cold.
Again, a set of guages will help pin point the problem. I still think you have low residual fuel pressure, and another cause of that could be a faulty check valve at the fuel pump in addition to leaky injectors or a bad fuel accumalator. |
#4
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The car does have 126k miles. My mechanic says the accumulator is good and can still be used now if the longer than usual start ups bother me then I could replace it.
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2001 E55 2001 E320 Sedan 2001 Subaru Legacy 2006 SLK280 2016 Subaru Outback 3.6 |
#5
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That's true. They probably aren't cheap nowadays.
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#6
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-1983 VW Rabbit LS Diesel (5speed, VNT/Giles build) |
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