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Old 05-10-2013   #1
Franke
 
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Beaver, PA
Posts: 515
Unhappy 1990 LT5 emissions fail

Can anyone tell me why a 1990 LT5 would fail emissions with 3.9ppm Nox? The car has 55,000 miles on it and runs great. The max Nox limit in this state is 3.5 ppm. The HC and CO are well within limits. Some emissions people tell me to check the EGR but I don't think the LT5 has a EGR. The local Chevy dealer thinks the cats are failing but can't go any farther. Any help would be appreciated.
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Old 05-10-2013   #2
Racinfan83
 
Join Date: Apr 2013
Location: Eastern Missouri
Posts: 773
Default Re: 1990 LT5 emissions fail

Not trying to be a smartarse - but are you sure you even have to pass emissions with a 1990 model car?? We have emissions in the Metro area here - but in Mo the car has to be a 95 and up. The test here is also an OBD test that plugs into the ECM to see if there are any codes, they don't do the "run test" anymore. You might want to check and see if you are exempt???
And I have also seen cars with ZERO emissions equipment on them that are well tuned pass a run test with lower emissions then a car with a ECM and full emissions. I proved it to one of my professors in College. SO - I guess what I'm saying is that it may not be running "great"....
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Old 05-10-2013   #3
Franke
 
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Beaver, PA
Posts: 515
Default Re: 1990 LT5 emissions fail

Thanks Racinfan. In Colorado's front range counties the requirement is that cars newer than 1982 have to pass the IM240 enhanced emission test. Perhaps i need to run it out for awhile and then use new fuel to see if there is a dif. I can't believe the cats are bad at 55,00.
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Old 05-10-2013   #4
mike100
 
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: San Marcos CA
Posts: 1,786
Default Re: 1990 LT5 emissions fail

NOx is very sensitive to ign timing, combustion temps (EGR help this), coolant temp, and fuel mixture. The air/fuel ratio at which NOx is minimized is a very narrow range and the oem calibration strives to keep it there during light loads and cruise conditions.

On mine, I found that changing out both of my 22 yr old O2 sensors did the trick and lowered the NOx significantly- like nearly half as much output.
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Old 05-10-2013   #5
Franke
 
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Beaver, PA
Posts: 515
Default Re: 1990 LT5 emissions fail

Thanks Mike, I thought about the O2 sensors as well. I might try that before going through the beating i will take on the cat converters.
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Old 05-10-2013   #6
SoCalZR1
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Southern California OC
Posts: 22
Default Re: 1990 LT5 emissions fail

Are you sure it is 3.5 ppm. I just ran my 90 through California smog, no small accomplishment, and it passed NO. We are on a "dyno" and it was 388 PPM at 15 MPH and 306 at 25 MPH. Max allowed is 541 and 498 respectively.

I did swap O2 sensors last time through. Also make sure they have a fan running through the radiator if it is a hot day or your NO will shoot up. And the usual clean tank of gas, of course. I squeaked by on HC right at max, by the way.

Mike
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Old 05-10-2013   #7
Franke
 
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Beaver, PA
Posts: 515
Default Re: 1990 LT5 emissions fail

Hi SoCalZR1,
The standards out of the book from Colorado is 2.000 HC gpm, 20.000 CO gpm, and 3.5 NOX gpm. I will run out this tank of gas, replace the O2 sensors and refill before I retest again. I will also run this car for 10 to 15 miles before taking it in. O2 sensors are alot cheaper than cats. AutoZone sells them for $44.95 and they are mfg by Bosch.
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Old 05-10-2013   #8
SoCalZR1
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Southern California OC
Posts: 22
Default Re: 1990 LT5 emissions fail

I see, gpm vs. ppm is all. Just different units of measure.

Sounds like a plan. One sensor is easy and the other, I forget which, is a PITA. But like you said, cheap swap of old parts. Good luck!

Mike
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Old 05-19-2013   #9
Z51JEFF
 
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Fremont, CA
Posts: 3,093
Default Re: 1990 LT5 emissions fail

Quote:
Originally Posted by SoCalZR1 View Post
I see, gpm vs. ppm is all. Just different units of measure.

Sounds like a plan. One sensor is easy and the other, I forget which, is a PITA. But like you said, cheap swap of old parts. Good luck!

Mike
I believe its the Pass side that a pain to replace.Its not so much the sensor but getting the plug to connect takes some work.
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Old 05-19-2013   #10
SoCalZR1
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Southern California OC
Posts: 22
Default Re: 1990 LT5 emissions fail

Quote:
Originally Posted by Z51JEFF View Post
I believe its the Pass side that a pain to replace.Its not so much the sensor but getting the plug to connect takes some work.
I think you are right. It was that connector that was the battle!
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