View Poll Results: uhhh
i want some of what ever this guy is smoking



47
49.47%
he is uber smart...thats right uber



5
5.26%
/end thread



43
45.26%
Voters: 95. You may not vote on this poll
pulled fuse = 10hp??? lol
after you pull some fuses i heard that if you suck on the exhaust while the car is running you get better flow through it...
i havent tried it but i figured its worth a good 10-15 hp
i havent tried it but i figured its worth a good 10-15 hp
The EXH fuse is for either bank 1 or 2 O2 sensors or both, im not sure. Pull it and the car goes into open loop. As to what it would do to the PCM while it still reads the other inputs, I dont know..... My guess is a longer pulsewidth than normal, which may result in a little more throttle response depending on other conditions but it doesnt give more power and is not a smart thing to do.
It might have been the exhaust fuse. Me and a friend were checking out the fuses one night since I just got the car and I was just checking **** out. We found a fuse that said EXH or something like that. I took it out and noticed a little more popping in the exhaust but that's about it. I had a check engine light at the time from putting hot side intercooler piping on wrong. After I fixed the piping I had a friend scan it with his computer he gave me the codes the piping put out and it also gave him o2 codes which I'm guessing is from the exhaust.
Once engaged, the compressor clutch will be disengaged for the following conditions:
Throttle position is 100 percent for 10 seconds.
A/C high side pressure is more than 2951 kPa (428 psi) and will reengage once the pressure drops below 2068 kPa (300 psi).
A/C high side pressure is less than 310 kPa (44 psi).
Engine coolant temperature (ECT) is more than 125°C (257°F).
Engine speed is less than 475 RPM.
Engine speed is 6,100 or more RPM.
ECM or PCM detects excessive torque load.
ECM or PCM detects insufficient idle quality.
Random kinda-related fun fact of the day:
The Russians have a nuclear submarine (the Akula class if I remember right) that uses lead as coolant. Every time they shut down the reactor, the lead solidifies in the system and they have to heat the lead up in the coolant lines to liquify it again before they kick on the reactor again.
talking about muffler bearings...apparently they are real in the toyota world...or was it volkswagen.....one of the 2 if not both actually have a part called a part called muffler or exhaust bearings.
Usually it's a rubber hanger or something, but it gets lost in translation to english and just becomes a "bearing". Seen that before.
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