Emissions Fail? 2018 GS
#21
Oh yeah, the car is for sure the most fun one to drive I have every owned. I have taken full day mountain trips just to drive it. Top off, wind, sun and curves. All I need
#22
Not sure 500 miles will do it. I had over 600 miles on mine when it failed the emissions test. O2 sensors not ready. GM Bulletin 15-NA-010 says it can take up to 1000 miles, possibly more. I did the GM drive cycle 5 times as well. Fortunately, I was able to get a waiver from the referee. Now good for 6 years.
#23
Nope, dealer not involved, except to give me the Tech Bulletin. Yes, it is a document that you must take to the local DMV office. In California, the DMV maintains a referee system specifically to address cars that fail the emissions test. You have to make an appointment with the nearest referee, and he will inspect and test your vehicle. The "referee" has the power to grant a waiver, passing the car.
Phil
Phil
#27
Safety Car
There is no mileage number that equates to a Drive Cycle completion no matter what GM says. It is theoretically possible to drive a million miles and not complete the drive cycle even once. Say you live in downtown Singapore or Manhattan and don't drive in the middle of the night. If that would be the case you would never complete steps 4, 5, 6, and/or 7. Ever. OTOH if you have a reasonable traffic situation available you can complete once iteration of each of the 8 steps in the drive cycle in less than 25 miles and 30 minutes if you approach it step by step. Do note that GM has said it may take 5 iterations of the complete drive cycle to complete all monitors.
Now I would ask the op which monitors show as incomplete? If you know that you can do the steps that are specific to that monitor and save a ton of time and a ton of miles. And if you don't know that you should. Most autoparts stores will check your pcm for free. Simply ask they how many monitors have completed and how many and which ones are yet to be complete then do the steps for that remaining monitor.
Additionally although the drive cycle is consistent for each manufacturer over the OBDII computers, the emissions laws are state specific. So asking for help without stating a specific state is not going to get you the help you want. Correct information has been posted for California where a state referee is available to help you if you are unable to understand the drive cycle or unable to complete it for some reason. That however is specific to new cars brought in from out of state to California with low or no miles (less than 7500). Your state will have its own laws and regulations.
But mindlessly driving around trying to hope your monitors magically complete is not very effective. Simply try and remember when you were able to hold a steady state speed of 55 mph for 5 minutes without actually concentrating on doing exactly that. Think about the last time you decelerated from 55 mph to 20 mph without touching the brake, accelerator, clutch or shifter unless you were concentrating on exactly that. Think about the last time you have started the car and let it idle for 150 seconds with the AC on and the rear and front defrosters on?? I would guess you would never do that unless you wanted to do that exact step. These steps of the drive cycle are not something you would normally encounter in daily driving.
Now I would ask the op which monitors show as incomplete? If you know that you can do the steps that are specific to that monitor and save a ton of time and a ton of miles. And if you don't know that you should. Most autoparts stores will check your pcm for free. Simply ask they how many monitors have completed and how many and which ones are yet to be complete then do the steps for that remaining monitor.
Additionally although the drive cycle is consistent for each manufacturer over the OBDII computers, the emissions laws are state specific. So asking for help without stating a specific state is not going to get you the help you want. Correct information has been posted for California where a state referee is available to help you if you are unable to understand the drive cycle or unable to complete it for some reason. That however is specific to new cars brought in from out of state to California with low or no miles (less than 7500). Your state will have its own laws and regulations.
But mindlessly driving around trying to hope your monitors magically complete is not very effective. Simply try and remember when you were able to hold a steady state speed of 55 mph for 5 minutes without actually concentrating on doing exactly that. Think about the last time you decelerated from 55 mph to 20 mph without touching the brake, accelerator, clutch or shifter unless you were concentrating on exactly that. Think about the last time you have started the car and let it idle for 150 seconds with the AC on and the rear and front defrosters on?? I would guess you would never do that unless you wanted to do that exact step. These steps of the drive cycle are not something you would normally encounter in daily driving.
#28
I did the drive cycle 5 times to no avail, car had 617 miles on it when it failed, last set of O2 sensors not ready. Here is the Tech Bulletin from GM. Apparently, there is a minimum number of miles that be driven in a new vehicle before the ECM will allow the post catalytic converter sensors to reset. Miles depends upon the vehicle and equipment. Here is the Bulletin:
#29
Safety Car
Thank you. Very enlightening.
It kinda sucks that they don't tell you the break in miles for your Corvette Z06. So it could be as much as 1000 miles for the cats to complete their monitor, but it could be 500 miles and they are not willing to tell you what it is. It seems like this is a problem that GM needs to correct in their software. If the software won't allow the monitors to be set for states that require them than that is a GM problem not an owner and not a state problem. Another way to look at this is that they are selling a car as ready for the road that is not ready for the road in many states.
Frankly I would be very upset if GM sold me a car that couldn't be used because it could not legally be titled in my state. It is most fortunate that California has the referee system to get around the titling issue. I expect that there are many states not as up to date. I wonder if the EPA and CARB know that the catalyst does not work to GM's satisfaction for up to 1000 miles?
It kinda sucks that they don't tell you the break in miles for your Corvette Z06. So it could be as much as 1000 miles for the cats to complete their monitor, but it could be 500 miles and they are not willing to tell you what it is. It seems like this is a problem that GM needs to correct in their software. If the software won't allow the monitors to be set for states that require them than that is a GM problem not an owner and not a state problem. Another way to look at this is that they are selling a car as ready for the road that is not ready for the road in many states.
Frankly I would be very upset if GM sold me a car that couldn't be used because it could not legally be titled in my state. It is most fortunate that California has the referee system to get around the titling issue. I expect that there are many states not as up to date. I wonder if the EPA and CARB know that the catalyst does not work to GM's satisfaction for up to 1000 miles?
Last edited by pkincy; 10-22-2017 at 09:50 PM.
#30
This is only a problem in CA if the car is purchased new in another state and does not have the CA specific smog sticker, which was the case with my car. If the car has the CA smog sticker, no smog check is required for the first 6 years.
Phil
Phil
#31
Safety Car
Correct and thanks for figuring the referee thing out, but it adds another step that makes it harder to buy from a national dealer to use a car in CA. I bought in NCal and drove the car down here so didn't have to do anything but that 500 miles would have been about half of the cat break in. I still wonder if CARB knows that GM doesn't consider the cats viable until they have been run for 1000 miles.
Just reread the TSB and GM says they did get CARB approval for cats not being viable for 1000 miles.
Just reread the TSB and GM says they did get CARB approval for cats not being viable for 1000 miles.
Last edited by pkincy; 10-23-2017 at 11:54 AM.