Opti problem?



As far as I know, if the Opti begins to go mechanically (like internal bearing, "cloudy" discs or cracked case, etc) the "Service Engine Soon" light will not come on. God knows it didn't for me when mine went!
However, if the optics are having an electrical problem, the optics are sending weird input to the ECM (like discs are not moving, duranged readings, etc) or the connection to the wire loom connector is bad, you will see one.
44,000 Miles is low for a bad opti, if everything is properly observed and a regualr preventative work schedule is maintained. I could be wrong, but I would bet it is not the opti-spark. If you are not seeing a code, then mechanically it would be dying. However, usually, people see the WORST as the engine heats up or travel "a few miles down the road". (Usually the bearing heats up and seizes the opti or the disc become hot, cloudy and hard to read the optics) Where as you saw it smoothing out as you traveled down the road and shut off the Air Conditioner
Not sure what it could be, someone will know what it is I am sure.
A wild guess: Since your A/C was on before you parked it, the A/C condensor sweats and some water might have traveled and landed on a bad coil (cracked or something) or a bad spark plug wire and shorted things out. Once you heated things up in there down the road, things dried up and things ran fine. Might explain why it did not start the first time (especially when you did not experience any problems before hand) as water might have dripped somewhere to short things out.
I would suggest to try it tomorrow without the A/C at all. I know living in Florida, it might be hard :D, but if the problem disappears. The atleast you know it is not Opti, or something major. I would start to check things like bad wires/coil.
Like you said, it might have been the car trying to recharge and recover some electrical loss by operating the headlight lights, A/C, and other things. Best thing to do is try it again.
Hope some of this helps. Take Care. :flag



[Modified by OURRUBY, 8:49 PM 5/2/2003]
Let us know when your ready to start.
:flag :flag :flag



Good luck
:flag :flag :flag
People know that the opti is a weak link in these engines so everything that goes wrong immediately gets blamed on it. I've seen it first hand people will go change the opti and it turns out that was not the problem. Often times it is the opti, but just as many times it isn't.
IMHO it is absolutely stupid to go change the opti on a car with 10 year old plugs, wires, & coil. Any of these could very easily be the problem and all of them together are a lot cheaper than the opti, and a lot easier to replace. Start with plugs, wires and a coil. Odds are that will correct your problem. If it does not then it will probably be the opti. Then if you replace the opti you essentially have a brand new ignition system. The plugs and wires won't be wasted because they needed to be changed anyway.
I have actually done this on two cars, one had 95k miles, the other had 130k miles. Both of them had the stock optispark and they both still do. It's not as fragile as everybody tries to tell you it is.
The Best of Corvette for Corvette Enthusiasts



[Modified by CORVETTE MIKE, 10:42 AM 5/4/2003]



Again, we'll be here when you start the project. :thumbs:
:flag :flag :flag



Did you decide on venting the opti?



Ken - Thanks for the heads up.
:seeya
Im having the same problem, took it to a chevy dealership and they found a vacuum leak going in to the throttle body(I didnt think that effected much though). Part came in today so I go back in the morning, I truly dont believe this will solve my prob,but they seem to think it will. I even rigged the line so I know for a fact I stopped the leak and it didnt change anything. Anyways they will be doing a plug, wires,coil, fuel filter, before we opt opti!!! CAUSE I SAID SO!
:steering:
[Modified by Mark13760, 8:45 PM 5/5/2003]











