Results 1 to 10 of 35

Thread: Slow acceleration

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    ken&ellen Guest

    Question Slow acceleration

    Most of my trips have involved interstate routes with highway speeds,but this last trip to New York involved stop and go traffic on Rt 13 through Virginia, Maryland, & Delaware. In many cases I would have to stop at another signal prior to reaching 40 MPH. I was towing my Jeep Liberty and did not have any problems maintaining 65+ MPH on the Jersey Turnpike nor the NY State Thruway. To use drag strip terminology it seems slow out of the hole! My '91 Liberty has the 8v92 DD and the Allison 4 speed, which were serviced within the last 3000 miles. All gauges were in the green, air filter is clean, oil level was right on, tire pressure was good, and fuel milage was in the 5 mpg range. Maybe it is too much to expect, but it seem as though I should be accelerating quicker. Your thoughts....ole wise POG members. Ken

  2. #2
    Ben Guest

    Default

    Clogged fuel filters could be a cause. All it takes a one tank of bad fuel. That's why some people never fill up when a fuel truck is at the station since filling the station's tanks can kick up all the gunk that is at the bottom of the tanks and allow you to pump some of it into your coach's tank.

  3. #3
    Chris and Debbie Yates Guest

    Default

    My 95 Royale also has an 8v92 and I find the turbo comes onstream much slower if I am running the busair, this obviously makes the bus slow off the line but it doesn't seem to make too much difference at highway speeds.
    Just my 10 cents worth.

    Cheers,

    Chris

  4. #4
    Joe Cannarozzi Guest

    Default

    Try running the dash blower fan on a higher speed, it will make you think you are going faster! Or get somebody else to drive and enjoy, at the rear. I got a feeling your bus runs fine. As they say, it is what it is.
    Last edited by Joe Cannarozzi; 07-26-2006 at 05:47 PM.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    anytown
    Posts
    8,908

    Default

    K and E,

    There are some simple things you can check quickly. Do you get full turbo boost when the engine is running above about 1500 and you floor it? If not, or if it is slow coming up look carefully around the manifolds and the inlets to the turbo for leaks, cracks, bad gaskets, etc. Sooting is the thing to look for.

    If that is OK, you are dealing with "density altitude" issues. As the summer air heats up, it is less dense, and is the equivalent of operating the bus at a higher altitude. If the bus is sluggish until about 1500 and then gets responsive your engine is probably OK, it just thinks it is operating at 4000 feet or more.

    You should have know that, right? Or don't Mooneys have those issues.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Lake Forest
    Posts
    2,486

    Default

    It's interesting you mention that. When I was in Salt Lake City, before the air conditioning meltdown, the bus felt very sluggish when accellerating from a dead stop. I thought at the time perhaps it's altitude, as SLC is up in the 5000 foot area.

  7. #7
    ken&ellen Guest

    Default

    Jon, Jon, Jon, Density altitude effects all aircraft. My Mooney had a Ram Air system above 5000 ft, but that did not help with take off issues during the dog daze of summer. I am sure that Jerry will say his Doc Killer does not suffer the effects of density altitude, but to some extent all lose some performance. It is a very good point; however since the trip home was in 90 degree heat with very high humidity. Thanks for your insight. Ken

Similar Threads

  1. Tire, slow leak?
    By adamdegraff in forum Ah Houston, I think we have a problem...
    Replies: 20
    Last Post: 09-07-2008, 09:29 PM
  2. The Slow Server
    By JIM CHALOUPKA in forum MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 12-09-2006, 03:34 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •