spridgets
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Re: Emission info help- no LBC

To: Glen Byrns <grbyrns@ucdavis.edu>
Subject: Re: Emission info help- no LBC
Date: Mon, 13 Sep 2004 23:12:15 -0400
Cc: gerard <pixelsmith@gerardsgarage.com>, spridgets@autox.team.net
References: <a06110403bd6ba74d8223@[209.209.93.106]> <097001c499de$72541900$6664640a@vgl.cvg.ucdavis.edu> from [151.201.47.158] at Mon, 13 Sep 2004 22:12:14 -0500
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.4) Gecko/20030624 Netscape/7.1 (ax)
Do they run a fan into the front of the car to simulate road conditions? 
Most dynotesting you see on the TV they have a giant fan to simulate the 
air flow and keep overheating from happening. Fresh oil change helps 
emission testing for me.

Dave

Glen Byrns wrote:

>Gerard,
>
>Overheating will definitely raise the NO component of the exhaust.  Anything
>that lowers the combustion temperature will reduce the NOx output.  Problem
>is that they have to "warm the car up to operating temperature" before
>performing the checks.  An ethanol rich fuel should help, anything you can
>think of to lower the compression ratio will help the NO, but hurt the
>hydrocarbon emissions.  If your cat conv. is in good shape, you could handle
>the additional HCs created as you try to drop the NO.  They are supposed to
>verify that the timing is "in range", so that rules out the old trick of
>retarding the timing for the day of test and putting it right back when you
>get home.  You should, however, be sure that it is set at the lowest
>allowable amount of advance when you are tested.  I took a class on all this
>stuff 30 years ago, but now three of my four cars are EXEMPT.  I may switch
>the Austin over to bituminous coal just for a giggle.
>
>Glen
>
>  
>
>>Well, time for my biennial SMOG check here in Kalifornia. If you
>>don't already know, last year they implemented a dyno into the
>>process and added NO gasses to the test. All my other reading were
>>extremely low, but I failed on NO (PPM) max at 15 MPH is 791 and I
>>read 965, at 25, max is 730 and I read 908. The odd thing is my car
>>overheated in the process (which it has not done in two years, ever,
>>and I'm wondering of that could cause the problem. If not, does
>>anyone know what needs to be corrected to drop this number?
>>
>>Thanks  for any help.
>>
>>Gerard
>>-- 

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