Jump to content

Welcome to RennTech.org Community, Guest

There are many great features available to you once you register at RennTech.org
You are free to view posts here, but you must log in to reply to existing posts, or to start your own new topic. Like most online communities, there are costs involved to maintain a site like this - so we encourage our members to donate. All donations go to the costs operating and maintaining this site. We prefer that guests take part in our community and we offer a lot in return to those willing to join our corner of the Porsche world. This site is 99 percent member supported (less than 1 percent comes from advertising) - so please consider an annual donation to keep this site running.

Here are some of the features available - once you register at RennTech.org

  • View Classified Ads
  • DIY Tutorials
  • Porsche TSB Listings (limited)
  • VIN Decoder
  • Special Offers
  • OBD II P-Codes
  • Paint Codes
  • Registry
  • Videos System
  • View Reviews
  • and get rid of this welcome message

It takes just a few minutes to register, and it's FREE

Contributing Members also get these additional benefits:
(you become a Contributing Member by donating money to the operation of this site)

  • No ads - advertisements are removed
  • Access the Contributors Only Forum
  • Contributing Members Only Downloads
  • Send attachments with PMs
  • All image/file storage limits are substantially increased for all Contributing Members
  • Option Codes Lookup
  • VIN Option Lookups (limited)

My 997 bucking/misfire


Recommended Posts

If the cats are broken inside you can hear it very easily. Shake the cat and you should not hear anything. If you shake the cat and it's broken, you will hear the broken element pieces inside. Some folks say you can test by hitting them with a rubber mallet with the cats still on the car......however, if you have the cats off the car it will be trivial to tell. Also, when you go to a scrap yard to get $ for the old cats, I noticed they poke into the cat with a long stick........... if they can poke far into it, that means the element is totally broken up. They use this as a very rough estimate to try to figure out how much of the cat is broken up inside.

Edited by Silver_TT
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Moderators

Thanks for you reply.

What do you think if i put my original cats back and test the car? Btw i store my original cats in my storage house out from the box, any problem with that? How i know if my original cats are broken inside?

Before I would be unbolting anything, I would be doing some of the suggested diagnostics to see if the sensors are working correctly; if you swap the cats and it was one of the sensors, you will be no better off than you are right now, but a lot more dirty and tired. And if you swap out all the sensors, and it was the cats, you would be in the same position, but out a lot of money unnecessarily.

Silver_TT is spot on about the old cats, they should have no moving parts and make no sound when you shake them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

JFP & Silver TT are right on track. One more note to add you should look at the fuel trims to be sure that the DME has fuel control. If one or more of the o2 sensors, injectors, fuel pump, vacuum leaks / pirate air, are giving bad feedback to the DME that could damage or even kill your Cat. Cats do not fail that often unless there is lack of fuel control or the internal honeycombs break apart from time. I would make sure you check all of your systems are working correctly. Dont just bolt on a good Cat and kill it. I have seen more techs in the field diagnose P0430 code, not do there home work and throw $$$$ by killing a brand new Cat.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.