95 camaro 3.4 v6. Idles smooth. Drives rough. Idles high after warm up. New plugs and wires last year. Only drove during summer. Any ideas out there.
I'm guessing something with an idle air controller, air flow sensor, or throttle sensor, but honestly could be any sensor that manages air/fuel control.
Could possibly diagnose by getting a datalogger which probably will require a cord of some sort and a laptop and some software. Sometimes the software is free, sometimes it's not. Track your sensors, o2 readings, timing, etc and see what looks wrong.
Thank you
Thank you
Thank you
Well I pulled lower intake and saw no evidence of a leak. So I still don't know why it's running rough. Have to pull rocker arm and rods to in stall gaskets. I read you have to get top dead center then start adjusting rods. But I read someone said you don't have to do that. He said just look at it and adjust the ones that the lifters are down then turn crank until others go down and adjust as they go down. His way would be easier but will it be right. Thanks for the imput.
TDC will occur at six different positions as you rotate the crank once. Each set of valves will close and open once every TWO crank revolutions. Sounds like this mystery guy IS moving the engine to each TDC for pushrod adjustment. Usually pushrods are adjusted at TDC of the compression stroke so that you can adjust the open gap of the rocker-camshaft interface.
TDC will occur at six different positions as you rotate the crank once. Each set of valves will close and open once every TWO crank revolutions. Sounds like this mystery guy IS moving the engine to each TDC for pushrod adjustment. Usually pushrods are adjusted at TDC of the compression stroke so that you can adjust the open gap of the rocker-camshaft interface.
This says for 1994 .. but should be the same for the 1995 ... If your car is rear wheel drive Cylinder 1 is Passenger Side Front .. so it goes "1,3,5" ... If it is Front Wheel Drive then the Odd Numbers are by the Firewall ... in either case, Cylinder #1 is closest to the Crankshaft Pulley
![]()
This says for 1994 .. but should be the same for the 1995 ... If your car is rear wheel drive Cylinder 1 is Passenger Side Front .. so it goes "1,3,5" ... If it is Front Wheel Drive then the Odd Numbers are by the Firewall ... in either case, Cylinder #1 is closest to the Crankshaft Pulley
![]()