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hen the starting prob occurs the engine cranks but sounds like it is straining to turn over almost like the engine is starved for fuel or something,
Niteowl wrote:The Battery cables are fine there was a little bit of what appeared to be either dirt or battery acid on there, so i cleaned that off as far as the intake sensor would that be noticable during a throttle body cleaning. If the intake sensor was bad though wouldn't that at some point prevent the engine from turning over at all.
Niteowl wrote:okay my battery last i checked was fine, why replace the starter, alternator or anything else if none of that is bad why throw money away if you don't have to. As for a stronger battery yeah i suppose i could probably go that route however, if i get one that's too strong that would probably damage the alternator which in turn could probably damage other things so. Granted i know you didn;t suggest replacing them but if everything appears ok a stronger battery would just burn out stuff like the alternator would it not, maybe it would just eliminate my problems entirely who knows. The battery i have now is a $29.95 great deal i got from walmart last year because i didn't feel like paying $100 for a battery from the dealer
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I have seen the fuel pressure regulator leak, causing a hard start.
I would check fuel pressure
Rob S wrote:Unfortunely a lot of people on here are morons.
Most of them are part changers, and keep Junkzone and NAPA in business, and some of those companies are turning record profits thanks to people that toss parts rather than diagnose the problem.
I see people said, toss a battery, toss a starter, toss sensors and this and that. They really arent to bright, every part of the car can be tested.
First off I'm not talking out of my ass here, I know what I'm talking about, I have several Michigan certs, and eight Nissan factory certs.
GM dealers, ( I work at one) are required to have a Midtronics battery, starter, alternator tester.
They can test the battery, starter, alternator all within 5 minutes.
If one of them was the issue, they would have seen the problem using the tool.
If the battery is dying after sitting for a long time, you can test the parasitic draw.
You need a voltmeter.
The car must have been sitting for more than 20 minutes, completely off. The reason is newer GMs, stay awake if you will for 20 minutes after the key was shut completely off.
You loosen, but do not remove the negative battery cable.
Meter reading set to 10amp scale.
You lift the cable up slighty, and attach the negative lead to the post, and the positive lead to the cable terminal itself. CAREFULLY remove the cable completely, make 100% SURE that the meter is ALWAYS touching, if it slips off either connections, you must restart the test.
Your reading should be below .100mA
Something else I have seen that comes to mind. A faulty intermittent ECT sensor.
If the car says it is hotter than it is, it will send a leaner mixture.
If it says 165F, but the coolant is actually 41F, you will have a very hard time trying to start the car. ECT sensors can be tested, I use a scan tool.
Otherwise you need a temp gun, and the resistance to temp chart to see if it working correctly.
I have seen the fuel pressure regulator leak, causing a hard start.
I would check fuel pressure, when trying to start the cold engine. Should read 52psi I think, KOEO, and KOER 60psi.
If the pressures are to low, bad FPR, or restriction in the fuel lines.
Lots of other things can cause hard starts to.
let me know if you need more help, you can send me a PM if you wish to, if you have any questions
how many miles you at by the way