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Gringo-Gaucho 03-28-2018 03:04 PM

Ecomodder powered VX Success story
 
Hi Everyone,
I wanted to say THANKS!
I've recently purchased a 1994 VX in good order with 180K. Initial Fuel Economy was 41, and through reading your ideas, a few repairs, and a few mods, I've now hit over 60 on a similar drive. Here's what it took, in chronological order:

Adjust timing- previous owner installed distributor, but left timing15 degrees off- adjustment got the power back down low in the rpms
Adjust valves
Repair speedometer-weak point on these cars is the solder joints on the back of the speedometer. Found some cold joints, soldered, got the speedo back.

new plugs- ngk4f-11 (previously some bosche ones)
Install MpGuino- Best mod ever. Knowing is half the battle, no? I have 175 tires to live with- so I'm going 2.6% more miles than the speedo says. MPGuino calibration number for VSS is thus 8001, not the typical 8208 for a VX
Tires to 50 psi
Build rear wheel covers and grill block using alupanel. Perfect for the job, sturdy like real body panels. Holds a curve. Get it used in scrap form from your local sign maker.
Front air dam- pretty aggressive, about 5" below original. This car is a bit saggy in the back, and I think was pushing a lot of air over that underbody.

At this point, I was feeling like I was at an impass-I was stuck around 50mpgs, and it was REALLY hard to stay in lean burn. I pulled compression just out of curiosity-I got 195-215-210-215. Pretty nice numbers... not that...
Finally, a break through- found a big issue- front brake drag-
my front pads had worn down into the rotors, so new rotors and pads there really helped in the front. I tried to make springs (Drag reducer clips) to push the pads back out, but the access is poor on the VX, and I couldn't come up with something I really liked and thought would help. I guess I'll do new hoses next, unless any other ideas here?
In the rear, I found more drag-
Fix e brake drag- I disengaged auto adjusters- this made the most difference.
Post brake drag fix it got a lot easier to keep the car in lean burn. Previously even a slight grade at 50 mph would put me out of it. Now I can drive "almost" normally and stay in lean burn...
Future mods: Hot air intake, kill switch, and side skirts

Gasoline Fumes 03-28-2018 04:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gringo-Gaucho (Post 565071)
front brake drag-
my front pads had worn down into the rotors, so new rotors and pads there really helped in the front. I tried to make springs (Drag reducer clips) to push the pads back out, but the access is poor on the VX, and I couldn't come up with something I really liked and thought would help. I guess I'll do new hoses next, unless any other ideas here?

Caliper pistons and pins in good shape?

mpg_numbers_guy 03-28-2018 08:35 PM

I had the same issue with my Civic - was getting 25%-35% lower gas mileage due to brake calipers sticking badly - so bad in fact that after driving only 10 or so miles my wheels were burning hot to the touch.

MetroMPG 03-29-2018 10:51 AM

welcome!!
 
Fantastic first post! Welcome to the forum, Gringo-Gaucho!

What gave you the efficiency bug? What were you driving before?

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gringo-Gaucho (Post 565071)
Install MpGuino- Best mod ever. Knowing is half the battle, no?

Feedback is a real eye-opener, eh? You can't manage what you don't measure.

Reminds me I need to re-solder mine to try to cure the random MPGuino resets I was getting last fall in the MPGiata.

Quote:

Future mods: Hot air intake, kill switch, and side skirts
The kill switch is another biggie. Are you using the key now?

I'm sure you've seen there are a couple of great VX and Civic builds here for further inspiration.

California98Civic 03-29-2018 12:52 PM

Repair before mod. Always good to see. Great writeup. Thanks.

Was that the wet or dry compression test. I guess the wet test since the numbers are so high. Something like 185 is more stock. What oil are you running?

Gringo-Gaucho 03-29-2018 11:12 PM

The biggest breakthrough was actually the destruction of the misnomer that these cars come from the factory as efficient as they can realistically get- Ecomodder shattered that facade for me.
As a lifelong efficiency nut- a sailor, kayaker, and long distance cyclist, I live in remote Alaska- fuel is extra expensive in dollars and ecologically, so it makes sense. Also, we hike in to our home around 3/8 mile, so no way to charge an electric car. Next best thing with four seats? VX !
Right now for EOC, I am using the key. Not fun and passengers don't like it, gotta get to that kill switch. I did put in a crappy hot air intake a few days ago, and I now have a partial/full seasonally switchable grill block option. I need some material for side skirts like the ones Gasoline Fumes has- I will check the dump!
BTW, Those compression numbers were dry, engine warm, crank till it stops climbing, mac tools gauge... Interesting that they would be above stock... how is that possible? I'm using 5-20 oil.
I plan to revisit the break pad issue- read some more posts tonight, and other VX's have installed the clips. I think one dragging break is worth about 10 aero-mods.

Other vehicles: 1937 Gaff Ketch(infinate mpg, sometimes!) Cedar Kayak- Miles per... Taco? Trek 500 With over 20K estimated miles(soon to be e-biked I hope), 1998 Tacoma(next ecomod subject) and a 1991 Civic DX that I plan to let go, The VX will be taking it's spot, since it has proven that it does get 20 mpg above the (admittedly UN-modified) dx

California98Civic 03-29-2018 11:44 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Wow! Hiking 3/8 mile to reach your house. What a different world than my coastal Southern Cali home. I searched the 1992-1995 Civic FSM, which includes your engine. Your compression ratio was slightly higher than other Civics of that generation at 9.3 (instead of 9.2 or 9.1 for other trims). But a document search turned up no results for compression test. I might search again. But I think 184 is the more precise number and you are more than 10% over that. High compression can be associated with pre ignition.

EDIT: I found a compression reference in the service limits section. 184 +/- 28 is considered within limits. See attached screen shot.

http://ecomodder.com/forum/attachmen...1&d=1522382679

Gringo-Gaucho 03-30-2018 01:10 AM

Compression
 
Well, from those numbers(thanks!) It looks like I'm 3 psi above spec on two cylinders. I'd guess that the individual doing the test made sufficient inconsistencies to account for that... Still, seems high after 185K!
Carbon buildup could cause that, no?
BTW, California98Civic, I've just been reading your WAI thread- I have a hunch it will prove very helpful to me in AK. I consistently note 10% loss or worse on my work truck in winter vs. summer- same tires. I suppose There is an increase in idle time for car warm ups though, and rarely extra rolling resistance from snow. Also, In the VX, I've noted warm days make it seem easier to stay in lean burn... but then... less air density could be a factor there... I'll throw out my conjecture and just say I can count on 1.15mpg...

California98Civic 03-30-2018 01:41 AM

I have become a little less enthusiastic about WAI builds. Mine is not currently installed. I am sure it reduces pumping losses, but not sure how the change in power affects FE and not sure the ECU does not adjust in ways that negate gains. Lots of debate about WAI builds here. I still have mine and might experiement again. Basically, I took it off for an emissions inspection and then was not sure I saw any penalty.

BTW, I have the Honda FSM that covers your car in PDF. I share it with EM members. PM me or post here if you want a copy and we can trade emails.

California98Civic 03-30-2018 01:42 AM

I have become a little less enthusiastic about WAI builds. Mine is not currently installed. I am sure it reduces pumping losses, but not sure how the change in power affects FE and not sure the ECU does not adjust in ways that negate gains. Lots of debate about WAI builds here. I still have mine and might experiement again. Basically, I took it off for an emissions inspection and then was not sure I saw any penalty.

BTW, I have the Honda FSM that covers your car in PDF. I share it with EM members. PM me or post here if you want a copy and we can trade emails.

MetroMPG 03-30-2018 01:29 PM

WAI may (probably does) benefit a lean burn engine more than normal engines.

It's a difficult thing to test. I have one on my winter beater Metro currently - one of the few mods that I really have no idea if it's helping/hurting.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gringo-Gaucho (Post 565214)
Other vehicles: 1937 Gaff Ketch

Wow - length? Pics?

Gringo-Gaucho 03-31-2018 01:42 AM

Well, boats then.
 
2 Attachment(s)
Well, at the risk of derailing the thread, She's 33' on deck, cedar on oak(all wood) and 22,000 lbs. She sleeps 4 with modest comfort- The best part- She nets around 50 mpg, assuming I manage to sail 50% of the time, which I usually do, even in inside waters. One pretty good trip up the inside passage was 18 gallons for 850 nautical miles of travel, three people, and one ton of firewood, among other things (^:
Here's two perspectives, one aboard, one afar.

MetroMPG 03-31-2018 08:47 AM

Very nice!

I have long thought there's a correlation between (some) sailors/pilots and interest in ecomodding/hypermiling. It's not too much of a stretch to explain it.

elhigh 04-02-2018 03:43 PM

Beautiful.

We're all about putting the wind to our advantage, so I think a moment's appreciation for a trim vessel isn't out of line.

Oh, and uh, nice work with the car. Yeah.

California98Civic 04-02-2018 05:06 PM

Glorious boat pics, hey.

Gringo-Gaucho 04-06-2018 12:57 AM

Well, sailing IS ecomodding, really- especially sail racing- we're striving to gain every little scrap of power from the various nuances of tweaking a sail, or trying a different tactic to get from point A to B. Th other interesting fact is that the only way to make your boat faster is to ecomodd it- make it more efficient, and you go faster with the same 15 knots of wind that you had before. Hence, If you like ecomodding, try sailing!


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