Rene_Z4MC said:
Nice write up and good pics
I did the same job a while ago but was struggling to clean the actual internals of the idle control valve.
How did you manage this? Did you take it further apart than shown in the picture, if not how were you able to clean it?
The connected hoses prevent proper cleaning IMO.
Cheers,
René
I agree with you that the connected hoses stop a really thorough clean. I did not disassemble it further than shown in the pictures, although I was tempted to do so.
It would be easy to disassemble it further; just use a flat blade screwdriver to lever up and open the metal clip holding the rubber pipe on each side of the idle control valve and then remove the pipes.
You would then have full access to the idle valve itself and the removed pipework.
When reassembling, just use a couple of decent quality jubilee clips instead of the clips you prize off.
In this instance, I left it as shown in the picture with the pipework connected. I used 3/4 of a can of Carb / Intake Cleaner using the small tube nozzle attachment, poked it down each rubber pipe and blasted a load in there:
I then rocked the valve slightly from side to side so the liquid kept flowing through the valve. Then turned the valve around so the liquid came out the other pipe. I kept doing this until the liquid flowed freely and was not so dirty in colour. It came out black for the first few goes.
I used Wynns Air Intake and Carb Cleaner Spray to start with and then ran out. The local motor factors unfortunately did not have another can so I got the Valvoline shown above. I preferred the Wynns stuff and would recommend this over the Valvoline.
Just driven the car again and it is brilliant now. Also, interestingly my idle is now higher on a cold start than previously so something is now working differently post clean up.
The car now idles at 1200RPM now on a cold start whereas before the clean it was 1000RPM. Warm idle is unchanged at 800RPM.
NB. Anyone attempting this or something similar, please make sure that your ignition is off and kept off until everything is reconnected. If you switch on the ignition before the air flow meter is reconnected for example, you will immediately have a fault logged in the DME and the engine management light will come on, requiring a reset to put it off again.