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The hell did the dealership do?
I took my FR-S into the local Toyota dealership for a 27k service (the last service on my ToyotaCare deal). Just wanted an oil change and a fluid check before the big 30k comes around. They also suggested a mass air sensor cleaning (?) and a de-carboning of the engine intake area (hmm...)
They also suggested a brake fluid flushing which I turned down, since I was going to install braided brake lines soon in the future. When I got the car back, everything seemed okay. While I was driving, I noticed that when I came to a stop, if I pushed in the clutch with the shifter still in gear, the engine would slowly rev up to 2000 rpm, then slowly reduce to idle at 500. If I pushed the clutch in and put the shifter in neutral, the revs would simply go to idle without the odd climbing. At first I thought it was something to do with the mass air sensor cleaning, but now I'm thinking they did some kind of software update to combat the famous "low idle" issue these 2013 models had. There's nothing in the receipt about a software update but maybe it was a Service Bulletin kind of thing. It almost seems like some kind of "rev match" feature. I'm going to call the dealership to ask what the deal is, but I thought I'd ask here first. Any info would help. Needless to say that's my last trip to the dealership for service, now that the ToyotaCare deal is over. |
I doubt anything happened. I've always noticed my car revving/idling a little funny after every dealer visit but after a bit of a drive it goes back to normal. Always thought it was due to maybe the dealer disconnecting the battery and the ECU having to relearn..got a video clip? 2 k RPMs is a big jump..
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I will make one.
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don't know about your specific situation. But I would unplug the battery then let the car idle for about 5 mins before touching the gas pedal
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If they messed with the MAF, your car's ECU is most likely just adjusting. I'd suggest you give it a couple hundred miles to settle down. :) humfrz |
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I agree with Tom, If they cleaned the maf sensor, I'd pull the battery lead. Fyi, when you do this it resets the ecu including the throttle position learning.. it will feel like dead peddle, this is normal, it'll fix itself. |
imo next time if it aint broke dont fix it. maybe they used too much cleaner and it needs to burn off/dry off.
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It is the MAF cleaner. Well documented symptoms. Also totally unrequired. Same as the "de-carboning of the engine intake". If you have carbon build up in your intake you have bigger issues!
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But, your dealership may try to make big things out of it …. :eyebulge: humfrz |
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All good points. Just goes to prove that dealerships RARELY suggest things that are actually needed for specific cars.
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