2001 Rover 75 air flow meter

Tiny
MFINN665
  • MEMBER
  • 2001 ROVER 75
  • 4 CYL
  • FWD
  • MANUAL
  • 167,000 MILES
What are the symptoms of a faulty air flow meter in a Rover 75 cdt? Temporary power loss at 2/3 revs
Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010 AT 4:06 PM

1 Reply

Tiny
MHPAUTOS
  • MECHANIC
  • 31,938 POSTS
Hi there,

I hope this is of help.

Diagnosing a MAF problem
Air Flow Meters are a common problem on most European cars at the moment and Alfa Romeo are no exception.

Air Flow Meters measure the amount of air passing into the engine from which the computer can work out how much fuel to add to get the perfect mixture for that specific throttle opening, the computer does this by referring to a map in its memory. The Air Flow Meter works by seeing how much current it takes to keep a wire at a specific temperature. However it is a sensitive instrument and it can be contaminated by oil (often used in aftermarket performance air filters), damaged by excess vibration caused by broken air boxes and we have seen problems with GTV 3.0 litres being fitted with 2.0 litre filters which leaves about an inch gap through which contamination gets in.

The fault will often not be shown on diagnostic system as the meter will still be operating within the limits the computer believes are OK, but putting the correct amount of fuel in for idle when the throttle is fully open will result in a very weak mixture and thus a lack of power.

The V6 and Diesel engines generally first get a flat spot  of the way up the rev range and this gradually this extends up to the rev limit and will rob up to 50 BHP from the V6 engines, we have known them to be lucky to get over 80 mph in really bad cases.

The 4 cylinder engines are less prone to failure than the V6's and the symptoms are more subtle with again a flat spot at approximately  of maximum revs but just a reluctance to want to rev to its maximum when the problem is acute.

The air flow meters will occasionally fail completely which will bring up a light on the dash and the symptoms described here are only the usual ones as we have known the fault to become apparent in other ways.

The easiest way to check if the Air flow meter is faulty is to get your local friendly Alfa Romeo garage to try one for you as they take very little time to fit, in most cases it is quicker than putting the car on the examiner and it is always nice to see the look on a customers face as they rocket off into the distance. Beware however as Lambda (or Oxygen) sensors in the exhaust can also give very similar symptoms to Air Flow Meters.

Mark (mhpautos)
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Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010 AT 4:11 PM

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