But my understanding was that the ECU in a gasoline (i.e. non-diesel) engine would gradually learn over time and even them out. Well... Drove for a month and that didn't happen.
I couldn't be sure that the vibration was due to the new injectors, just had that sense, so today I swapped the original set back in. Much smoother at idle, and even feels smoother when driving. Note that no codes were ever set with the new set in, and the fuel trims were <1.0 (i.e. no vacuum leak at manifold or anything like that).
The new injector set looks identical the old set (apart from being much cleaner) and the markings are the same. Any experts here who can answer the following?
- Does the ECU on gasoline engines really auto-adapt to these?
- Do I need to trigger an adaptation manually?
- Do I need to enter injector code (thought this was for diesel only, and I don't see any differing markings on them...)
- Does this likely mean that 1+ injector(s) are either defective or not well flow-matched?
- Is there some easy (and inexpensive) way to test them?
I hate to just discard them since I paid good money for them, and of course now 240k injectors are back in, which is what I was trying to pre-empt in the first place, but I hate to install them given that rough running means that obviously something isn't ideal with combustion. I doubt I can send them back after driving on them for a month and I really don't want to try to figure out if Bosch has some sort of RMA procedure as that sounds like it'll take more time and aggravation than their cash value
Thoughts?






