Dean1234
Member Since: 18 Jan 2022
Location: Northamptonshire
Posts: 219
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Cold Starting Great, Hot Starting, Not So Good | |
I'm once again sending out the bat signal for some more help and advice . Following on from my previous thread where the cars issue turned out to be a turbo actuator https://www.freel2.com/forum/topic40267.html . I have another issue to get my head around.
Symptoms:
When the car has been left overnight or just providing the car isn't at normal running temperature, it will start perfectly fine. When the car has been driven for a while and has got up to temperature, the next start it will do will be somewhat sluggish/lethargic and doesn't fill Alana and I with much faith that it will even start the next time it has to.
In all of the time we have owned the car, the car has always started very confidently and I think we both agree that this behaviour isn't normal for our car. So we know something isn't right/going wrong, we just don't know what .
Things To Possibly Rule Out:
In the 2 years we have owned the car, we haven't put a battery on it so we had no idea how old the battery was. So we have installed a new A6 Varta Silver Dynamic AGM 110 12V 80Ah 800A battery and told the car that it's had a new battery installed. That has taken it from barely starting the car when it's hot on the old battery into a level where it starts the car but as I say above, still seems lazy and lethargic to start.
With it being the TD4.e with the start stop on it. It already has the 2nd earth installed on it from the factory. While it could be a connection issue, I think we can rule out a lack of "earthage" issue.
I now have an Autel AP200 Bluetooth OBD2 adapter so can do more thorough scans and there are no codes stored for this issue.
When I was measuring the voltage via the OBD2 port, it was sitting at between 14.2V and 14.4V while the car was being driven. My gut is telling me from this that it isn't down to a lack of "juice" being put back into the battery and it being an alternator problem. Even if it was, wouldn't the issue show itself more on cold starts than hot starts?
My gut is also telling me it's not a starter motor issue because again, wouldn't that show itself under cold starts where it's under more stress than hot starts. Although I do cravat this by saying, could the starter motor get too hot from heat soak, therefore affecting it's starting performance?
Things We Will Be Trying/Need Help With:
I always like to try at the simple/free end of the scale and work my way up. So first off...
I noticed when going from Northamptonshire to Grantham, the car was sitting between high 80 degree C to sitting at 102 degrees C at points of the trip doing between 50 to 70 mph. I could be wrong but this seems a little high to us. One thing that's regularly talked about between people that take their Freelander 2's off road, especially through sloppy mud like we have is mud all dried up in the radiator. Potentially a lack of cooling due to dried up mud > Higher than normal temps > More heat soak which then affects starting?
Hopefully this weekend, Alana and I are going to take the wheel arch linings out and front bumper off and have a look/clean to see what the situation is there.
My 2nd idea and one that I require help with. I've done some searching on this issue and sometimes it's hard to work out if people are saying Td4 as in Freelander 1, or TD4 as in Freelander 2 . But anyway, there has been mention of the camshaft sensor can get hot which produces some kind of open circuit. Then when it cools, the circuit closes and the car goes back to normal. But this seems like it would provoke a not starting at all issue which we don't have, it's just sluggish? As you might be able to tell, I'm out of my depth talking about these things but I try my best .
Alana and I are going purchase some sensors, if not to fix this issue, but to have in the car for the future. But we need help in what sensors to buy...
- Camshaft Sensor LR016847 https://www.lrparts.net/lr016847.html
I'm guessing ignore the INTERMOTOR version at £13.05, ignore the OEM at £22.79 and buy the Land Rover version at a whopping £100.07? I know with some sensors, people say to buy none other than the Land Rover version and I'm guessing this is one of them? Obviously I want to try and avoid as much "green oval tax" as possible. So is there any other cheaper variant that can be trusted or even the same part but through Ford seeing as people say it's a Ford engine?
- Crankshaft Sensor LR000681 https://www.lrparts.net/lr000681-crankshaf...99999.html
With our VIN ending "AH18XXXX" and it being a 2010 car, I'm guessing that's the correct one? I know from another thread on here that there are 2 different types with different target wheels? Is this another sensor to ignore the aftermarket and OEM parts at £8 and £14.74 respectively and order the Land Rover version at a whopping £123.30? Yet again, any other trusted equivalent out there? Or another case of "you gets what you pays for"?
- Mass Air Flow Sensor MHK501040 https://www.lrparts.net/mhk501040-mass-air...ensor.html
Alana's "happy" to buy the other 2 sensors in the genuine Land Rover flavour if she has to, but this one she is struggling with and her first reaction is to go down the aftermarket or OEM route priced at £28.50 and £63.98. How important would you say it is to buy the genuine Land Rover version at £188.10?
Over to you now. I guess there is 2 parts to this thread. 1 being any help, tips, things to try to resolve our slow starting issue? 2, How important is it that those 3 sensors get ordered in the genuine Land Rover flavour seeing just how much of an increase there is on those prices ?
Thanks to anyone that can help .
Scott https://www.youtube.com/@scottandalana4x4
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