I have an
82 and have not had any trouble starting the car. It is not an EFI if that makes a difference.
Dads 82
Lawrence R Noska
lnoska@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Hauser, ID 83854
-----Original
Message-----
From:
mailing-list-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:mailing-list-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]On
Behalf Of DavisADM@xxxxxxx
Sent: Saturday, June 05, 2004 2:53
PM
To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: IML: 1983 Chrysler
Imperial: starting problems
Paul, it is too bad that you have such a dislike for the 81-83
Imperials. It is each of our own rights to have an opinion. Sounds
like you had a bad experience with these cars. I personally think they
are the best looking and most appealing of the Imperials. Sure, your 68
is simple and reliable, but with proper care, maintenance, and not neccessarily
a ton of money, the 81-83 can also be the same. People who are into older
cars, usually are somewhat mechanically inclined, since keeping up an older car
most likely requires some regular tinkering.
Davis
81 Imperial, white, sunroof, red leather interior, original CB radio
82 Imperial, Glacier Blue, dark blue leather interior, EFI
82 Imperial FS, Light blue Kimberly cloth interior
83 Imperial, white, red leather interior, original owner, xlnt original
condition, daily driver
In a message dated 06/05/2004 2:16:29 PM, RandalPark@xxxxxxx writes:
Well, you may be right, and of course we are each entitled to our
opinions. If "the basics" would be a good place to start, it would be
better to start with a basic car. That word does not describe these particular
automobiles.
Trouble shooting that car is going to cost a ton of money, and a firm
commitment of love on the part of the owner. If the love isn't there, I
still say sell the car. The owner already knows if "love" is in the
equation. The rest is easy.
Paul
In a message dated 6/5/2004 2:07:07 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
nt014b6628@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx writes:
>
>
> Whoa,
>
> I think that maybe we are getting ahead of ourselves here, two of the
> recommendations include selling the car or ripping the EFI system off and
> putting a carb set-up on, i personally think this is a bit extreme when
the
> basics have not been checked first.
>
> Joel says that the car came from William who i recall had some problems
with
> his car, i do not know who did the repairs for William but lets not assume
> that
> what was done is 100%, and that the only answer is to get a sledgehammer
to
> crush
> this poor starting nut.
>
> I think it would be fair for Joel's 83 (and his sanity) if we cover the
> basics first, there
> are many an IML member who enjoy their EFI powered cars, (myself and Dick
> Benjamin included) the rip it off and start again approach can have more
> pitfalls than there is keeping an EFI powered car running.
>
> Neil 82 Imperial London, England.
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "michael popp" <popp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Sent: Saturday, June 05, 2004 3:59 AM
> Subject: Re: IML: 1983 Chrysler Imperial: starting problems
>
>
> > Joel---Don't panic---Your 83 is a beauty to behold ---Find a 80 Cry
> cordoba
> > without lean-burn --preferably a 4 barrel and put that set-up on your
83
> > Imperial ---it will run better than ever -start every time and make
you
> > smile----I did that to my 86 Ply first and am in process of doing my
82
> > Imperial F S Ed---Feel free to contact me off-list at
> > mailto:popp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Mike
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: <RandalPark@xxxxxxx>
> > To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> > Sent: Friday, June 04, 2004 7:05 PM
> > Subject: Re: IML: 1983 Chrysler Imperial: starting problems
> >
> >
> > > This was a frequent problem with early '80s, first generation
> computerized
> > cars. In most, the ignition and the fuel system are both computer
> > controlled. There are a guzillion reasons why these cars either stop
> running
> > or won't start. In many cases, the trouble is intermittent and
difficult
> to
> > find. Many Auto Electric shops in the good old USA became very
wealthy
> > during the time that these cars were on the road. The sad part is,
most of
> > them never really ever figured out what was wrong with the cars.
> Eventually
> > their owners became annoyed and sold them.
> > > I hate to be so general here, but I know from experience that
this was
> > universally true among the big three and most likely others too. My
newest
> > Chrysler Product has always been my '68 Imperial. I have '80s
offerings
> from
> > each of the other major manufacturers, and have had occasional
problems
> with
> > both, although the G.M built cars have been much more reliable than
the
> ones
> > from Ford. I still run both of them on a daily basis.
> > > When those Imperials were new, many people had exactly that kind
of
> > trouble with them. The cars will run perfectly, and for no apparent
> reason,
> > quit on the road or refuse to start. Over the years I have found that
the
> > folks that were the most successful keeping those cars on the road
were
> the
> > ones who "loved them no matter what".
> > > I have also found that reading the wiring diagrams and
understanding
> where
> > relays and sensors (both vacuum and electronic) are, and
understanding
> what
> > they do helps a lot. Relays with dirty contacts can cause an
intermittent
> > problem for years before they actually quit working all together.
This is
> > also true of sensors.
> > > In summary, I would say that there probably is not one thing
that anyone
> > here can tell you that will solve your problem. If you love the car,
you
> > will become very accustomed to knowing under what condition your car
does
> > certain things. Eventually you will be able to make sense out of that
> > information, along with the things that you read and study to make a
good
> > stab at finding the faulty part or parts. The other option would be
to pay
> > someone else to do that, but I offer this: back during the time that
those
> > cars were on the road there were few, if any mechanics that could
trouble
> > shoot them. Most people just got taken to the cleaners, and still
couldn't
> > depend on their cars to run when they were suppose to.
> > > If you don't want to go through this process, I would suggest
selling
> the
> > car, or becoming a member of AAA Plus. If you can, buy extra towing.
> > > Paul
> > > In a message dated 6/4/2004 1:40:48 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
> > joelrsmith@xxxxxxxxxx writes:
> > > > Hi Guys,> > I have a 1983 Chrysler Imperial that I
purchased about a
> > month ago. It's in pretty decent condition, but does have some rust
in the
> > rear left & right quarter panel & the bottom of the deck lid.
It has
> 130,000
> > Miles on it (but there is an asterix beside where it says that, don't
know
> > what that means) and gets from 15 - 20 US MPG on a tank.> >
Right from the
> > beginning, whenever I would start it, it would crank over a bit more
than
> > what I would expect a "normal" car to do, although I did
hear from a
> certain
> > mechanic that due to it's older computer, that could be normal. It
always
> > drives & idles nice though. Anyways, here's what happened: I
drove my car
> to
> > work friday morning (7:30 am), and it did it's usual "longer
than normal"
> > start, all was good. It sat all day at work in about say 20 C (68 F)
> > temperature. I finished work around 5:00 pm and went to start my car.
The
> > first try I held the key in the "start" position for about
6 - 8 seconds,
> it
> > just cranked, didn't fire once. This was kind of surprising, as it
had
> never
> > done this before. So I tried it again, nothing. After that, i tried
> pumping
> > the gas pedal (I usually NEVER touch the gas pedal at all before or
during
> > starting) while I was cranking it, it actually fired one or two times
but
> > didn't start. Next, I pulled off the air cleaner cover, & I could
smell
> > as( but it didn't appear flooded), so I left the cover off for a
minute or
> > two, then put it back on and tried again. Nothing. > > So after
that I
> went
> > back inside to where I work & called AMA to send over a tow
truck. Next
> > about 30 mins had passed since I had last tried starting the
car) I went
> > outside again to see if I could start the car. I put the key in and
> cranked
> > it...it didn't fire for a sec or two, but then caught a few times
&
> started.
> > For the first few seconds it ran rough, like it had too much / too
little
> > fuel, but after that it smoothed out and idled like it has always had
> before
> > (it idles nice btw). So now i'm a little scared about something like
this
> > happening again (i've been driving it for about 4 days since then and
it's
> > always started). Now would any of you guys have any idea what the
problem
> > could be and what I can do to fix it? I'm also interested in why it
seems
> to
> > need a few excessive cranks to start. > > Oh, and you can check
out
> pictures
> > of my car here: > http://www3.telus.net/agentsmith> > Thanks
in advance.>
> >
> > Joel Smith> Edmonton, Alberta.> > > > > Join
Excite! -
> > http://www.excite.com> The most personalized portal on the Web!
|