Hi, all.
Ok, got a problem that's been vexing me on my 174.5 cc liquid-cooled fuel-injected 2010 Kymco Yager GT 200i running on 87 AKI octane gasoline from Costco, and using Royal Purple 15W-40 synthetic oil. It's got an NGK DPR7Eix-9 Iridium spark plug in it.
On cold startup, the engine seems to only hit on half the cycles, then as it warms up, it sounds like it starts hitting on all the cycles. It never dies, engine speed is normal idle speed, there are no DTC (Diagnostic Trouble Code) codes and everything looks good when I hook up the Kymco Diagnostic Tool. *Everything* is just as it's supposed to be, according to the Diagnostic Tool (fuel injector pulse width, coolant temperature, ignition dwell time, etc.).
So it starts out with a "rum-dum-rum-dum-rum-dum" sound that slowly smooths out to a "rum-rum-rum-rum" sound over 30 seconds or so. It also smells like it's running rich when cold.
There are no starting problems. Just a touch of the starter button and it fires right up, warm or cold.
When it's warmed up, it runs like a champ, no hesitation, no power loss... in fact, it's got so much power it's super easy to hit the rev limiter, despite running heavier than normal variator weights (18 grams instead of 16 grams).
Even when it's cold, it runs like a champ, but the power definitely climbs as the engine warms up... max speed when cold is about 68 MPH, then as it warms up, it'll go up to the rev limiter at about 77 to 78 MPH pretty easily.
I've replaced the O2 sensor, but that didn't make a difference on the cold start issue. I cleaned out the Idle Air Bypass Valve with some throttle cleaner from Kragen, but that didn't make any difference. I used the Kymco Diagnostic Tool to reset the Air Per Cycle (APC) valve and engine idle speed (for some reason, engine idle speed was set to 1716 RPM, when I reset the APC, it dropped back to the factory 1660 RPM).
None of that helped.
The spark plug comes out looking good, there's just the tiniest bit of light brown buildup on the flat edge of the plug below the threads, the insulator is an off-white color, no bubbling or cracking of the insulator. This spark plug is one heat range cooler than OEM, which should make it more prone to fouling, but it's definitely not fouling.
My fuel mileage has actually been getting better and better... I'd almost resigned myself to only getting about 65 MPG, but lately it's been climbing. The last tankful was 74.6 MPG, an all-time-high MPG. It's hit all-time-high MPG the last three tanks as the MPG climbed.
I've been running Startron Enzyme Fuel Treatment (one ounce per tankful), and that's helped the lumpy cold idle a bit, but not much.
So I got to thinking... could it be the Secondary Air Supply System pumping too much air into the exhaust pipe while idling, thereby tricking the ECU into richening the mixture? I've got heat wrap on my exhaust pipe, but that shouldn't matter on a cold startup.
Remember that the SASS injects air into the exhaust upstream of the O2 sensor as a means of pollution control, sort of a smog pump... but if that's what's causing this, why is it only happening on cold idle, and under no other conditions?
I'm stumped, so I'm looking for others who've experienced the same and figured it out already.