The white sensor was replaced 3 times and it didnt make a difference when pluging it in to the white one instead of the blue one.
ECU fault?
BTW Thanks for helping me out mate.:)
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Your car is digifant i'm guessing.
Mine is/was k-jet but i think a similar issue happened to mine. The blue plug on my car was at the end of the intake manifold and connected to a kind of 'fifth' injector to deliver more fuel for cold starting. Maybe vw use the blue to symbolise temperature? I had bad running when cold but it got worse when engine was warm! Turned out the engine temp sensor was faulty and consequently giving a "cold engine" reading to the metering head which in turn told the 5th injector to kick in, thus giving too rich a mixture causing bad running especially at idle.
I disconnected the blue plug to disable the cold start injector and it was a little rough when cold but obviously improved once it was warm because the mixture wasnt so rich.
Perhaps the water got in somewhere and shorted something with your temp sensor plug and now its giving wrong 'instructions' to the cold start mixture???:???:
Just a thought...wade
NEWS,
when i plug in the blue sensor in the moring (car 100% cold) the car runs perfect, like normal. When i parked at the train station, turned off the car, tryed to turn it back on to fix parking the problem was back. I left the car in the sun, so it wasnt full warm when i came back from the cbd but was warm and it would start fine but as soon as u start to drive the problem would come back.
The car runs fine when it goes from cold to warm but as soon as you turn it off and try to turn it back on while its warm the problem is there and i have to unplug the blue sensor so i can drive the car.
What do you guys rekon?
Bump.
Any answers?
yep, sounds like what i said.
Engine is getting too much fuel when warm. The blue plug is probably the thing giving the extra fuel.
Its gotta be something to do with the Digifant cold start valve which is prone to gremlins.
It thinks the engine is always cold so it feeds heaps of fuel like a choke, which is fine when engine is cold, but no good for a warm engine as it gives a really rich fuel mixture basically flooding the engine.
I'd say the blue plug/sensor is either the cold injector, or the thing that tells the cold injector to squirt more fuel in. This would explain why the car runs better when warm after you disconnect it (because you have stopped the flooding).
Maybe your engine temp sensor has died?
Wade
There is no "Digifant" cold start valve. The injectors are pulsed longer for extra fuel by the ecu.
Ive ordered a new blue sensor, comes in on tuesday, $34 damn it :(
I hope it solves the problem.
Hey Spyda,
Did you find the solution to your problem? Was it the Blue sensor that fixed it ?
I have a VERY similar sounding problem....after 2 days of finally buying my lovely MK2 at last :)
I just want to drive it now...
Thanks,
Rob
You can check any of those sensors with a multimeter on OHMS range. Hook to the sensor and watch the resistance change as the water gets hotter. I don't know the figures but the resistance should start higher and come down as it gets hot. NTC negative temperature coefficient.
I have been thinking about this one too. Again not having a book handy, I wonder if when the plug is disconnected, it also stops the ECU looking at the lambda probe. Which is in fact the real problem.....
Maybe Jimmy will chime in if he sees this thread.
Gavin