jetjock said:Well, if the mixture varies even a little from what's correct and stays there for a certain time the O2 sensor will report that to the TCCS as a fault and should set one of two codes. It'll only do that if the igniton key has been cycled twice with the problem present both times. Maybe it's not a mixture problem after all. No way to tell without either measuring the exhaust stream or checking the O2 sensor signal. Based on no codes I'm going to go out on a limb and say it's not a mixture problem. The cat could be contaminated by some additive you put in the fuel or oil ie; the "seafoam syndrome". H2S is almost always caused by a rich mixture though. It's tough to know without doing some more digging. Run the engine at 2500 rpm for 10 minutes with the brake booster hose off and the O2 sensor unplugged. That'll drive the system lean and burn off anything that might be in the exhaust system or on the O2 sensor. It's an old trick used by emissions techs. Can't hurt anything to try.
KINGPIN33 said:Will that trick burn carbon and junk out of the combustion chamber? My spark plugs are pretty black colored. thanks.
jetjock said:Examining plugs is one way to tell if the engine is running lean or rich. In fact you're right, I should've told the OP to check his plugs since he has no ther way to measure mixture. If he's rich enough to foul the cat his plugs will look like yours.
Plugs in an engine running lean will have bright white insulators so this will clean the plugs but you'd have to do it for a long time to clean any CC carbon. Not a good idea. This isn't going to help you anyway. You're treating the symptom and not the disease. You need to find out why the engine is either burning oil or running rich. Start with a compression test.
jetjock said:No, not at that power setting and load. That they will is a common misconception. Kingpin: You left that motor open and exposed over a winter? You didn't protect the bores? And you're using a 20-50 and Lucas in Toronto? In winter?