Sunday, March 18, 2012

Quick, Why Won’t This Car Pass the Smog Check?

I've had more Honda Civics than any other type of car (at least one example of each of the first five Civic generations), at one point owning two '85 hatches and a CRX at the same time. The mid-80s CVCC cars were great to drive and very reliable (provided you didn't overheat the engine— ever), but when California tightened up smog-check requirements in the early 2000s it became impossible to keep one registered. Why? This.
If I ever decide to get a huge tattoo across my back, it will probably be this Vacuum Hose Routing Diagram for carbureted 1984-86 Civics. It's as elegant as Harry Beck's map of the London Tube system, yet terrifyingly complex to the backyard Civic mechanic who just wants to pass California's dyno-based emissions test. Every time I spot one in the junkyard, I stop to check it out… and remind myself how happy I am with the bone-simple EFI plumbing under the hood of my '92 Civic DX.
Why so ludicrously complicated? The CVCC stratified-charge system started out as a fairly simple setup: you had a big combustion chamber that got a lean air-fuel mix, a little combustion chamber that got a rich mix and the spark, and a two-in-one carburetor that supplied both chambers as needed. This worked great through the 1970s and into the 1980s, but as American— and Californian— emissions requirements got stricter, Honda had to add a bunch of auxiliary systems to ensure that the car wouldn't spew out too much HC, CO, and/or NOx out the tailpipe, no matter what the driving conditions.
So, let's say it's 42 degrees out and your CRX has just hit the downhill grade on I-80 at Donner Pass. There's a sensor to tell the car's primitive ECU that external air temperature is below 60 degrees, another one that can tell you're at high altitude, and yet another to detect that you've just backed off on the throttle. This information gets turned into vacuum signals, via a bunch of vacuum solenoids and valves, and then more vacuum signals are sent to various vacuum- or electro-vacuum-actuated devices, which adjust the fuel-delivery system accordingly. If any one of the hoses or devices in this system stops working, the car will probably run just fine… but it will almost certainly fail the tailpipe emissions test.
So (after hundreds of hours of testing and parts replacement— per car— in order to get my cars through the smog check), that's why I got rid of my CVCC-ized third-gen Civics and swore to drive only fuel-injected versions from that point on.
Civic_Vacuum_Diagram-Detail3 Civic_Vacuum_Diagram-All Civic_Vacuum_Diagram-Detail1 Civic_Vacuum_Diagram-Detail2 00-Pair_o_Civics_Lincoln-cropped



from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com




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