Originally Posted by
chrome730 i was tryin to run my car through inspection and my car failed due to high hc
OK.
Mine did too,
I replaced the cat and passed.
Originally Posted by
Amave i would start with this 1st.
WHAT CAUSES HIGH HYDROCARBON (HC)?
Below are common failures which are likely to produce high Hydrocarbon HC. Hydrocarbons are basically raw fuel, otherwise known as Gasoline. High Hydrocarbon (HC) emissions are almost always a sign of poor fuel ignition. However, it's not always that the engine's ignition system is responsible for high Hydrocarbon emissions. Read on.
4. Defective Catalytic Converter - A defective catalytic converter (CAT) may be responsible for high HC, CO, and NOx emissions. The Catalytic Converter, commonly referred to as the CAT is a component designed to continue the combustion process within itself and emit a more thoroughly burned and less harmful emissions containing exhaust. The most accurate way to find out if your vehicle's CAT is working efficiently is by using an exhaust gas analyzer. Unfortunately this tool is fairly expensive. Testing the CAT should be conducted at a smog check repair station.
Originally Posted by
chrome730 cause in delawares test it shows what passed and what doesnt as far as emissions and it says the cats ok and everything
So the emission test
that you failed, says the "cat is OK."
Has the cat been specifically tested and inspected, removed from the vehicle and examined, by itself, by your mechanic?
See PhorB13's comment below:
Originally Posted by
PhorB13 It just says the CAT is ok if you HAVE one. I ran my VE thru in CT and failed, my HCs were high. I replaced the CAT with a universal replacement one, and EVERYTHING, my NOx, my HCs, etc, all dropped considerably and I passed. You can get a cat online for a bit over $100 and call it a day.
Did you actually read that?
Originally Posted by
chrome730 it says pass on the cat
You are the hardest headed dude I have ever seen.
You refuse to believe your catalytic converter may be bad.
Originally Posted by
neptronix This is due to a bad catalytic convertor the majority of the time. off brand replacements are cheap. Cat convertors usually last anywhere from 5-20 years. I've had to replace them on more than a few mid 90's cars.
Originally Posted by
chrome730the sections state that the ecs which is what the cat is tested under has passed.
See PhorB13's statement above.
Originally Posted by
chrome730i seem to now have a bit of a wait to start up the engine which will crank for about three four secs and then fire as it warms up it will drop to about 7 then start to bog and an some occasions die. but after i restart it just idles badly.
So your car is running like absolute crap, you refuse to believe it could be your catalytic converter, and you will not even check the thing, even though everyone in this thread has told you to do so?
What the f*ck do you really expect?
Your car
admittedly runs like stinky, sweaty, ass crack while you are driving to the Inspection Station. Is it some surprise to you that it does not pass?
Best of luck to you.