| Thanks for the tips. I haven't changed the 
oil in a while, so will do that. I did put fresh gas & drove for about 20 
minutes before going to emmissions. I live in Arizona & it was about 104 
when I went. The carb is a brand new Carter that I installed a little over a 
year ago.It took me 4 attempts at adjusting last year before it finally 
passed.      They put the car 
on a dyno & test HC & CO both at idle & under load. The readings I 
got were;   HC 
Loaded        
Standard        
Result         
Idle      Standard    
Result        
199                
450             
Pass          166         
450         Pass   CO  
Loaded       
Standard        
Result          
Idle       Standard      
Result        
4.98              
3.75             
Fail              
1.21        
5.00          
Pass   Since last year, I've readjusted the air 
idle mixture, so will look at that again & also replace the air 
filter.  The plugs are Autolite #85 with 500-600 miles on 
them.   
  ----- Original Message -----  Sent: Wednesday, June 28, 2006 9:29 
  AM Subject: Re: IML: 69 Imperial Failed 
  Emissions 
 Something that I do for emissions tests is to do an oil change immediately 
  before the test (the same day). I  do not know if this is an old wives 
  tale, but it has served me well on many emissions tests. I guess the idea is 
  to not have any crap in your oil at all which could effect the emissions. This is probably also a good opportunity for a complete tune up as posted 
  below. I am a big believer in electronic ignitions and high voltage 
  coils. I have an Mopar distrubitor/Orange ECU/MSD Blaster II coil on my 
  1969 LeBaron, but previously ran a Pertronix I/stock coil on a 1966 383 
  Newport with great success. The Pertronix unit is relatively cheap (ca $75) 
  and almost undetectable, simply replacing the points and requiring a power 
  lead. After installing the Pertronix I did not touch the ignition on the 
  vehicle for 10 years, at which point I got rid of it. ----- 
    Original Message -----From: "Christopher H"
 To: "IML (main)"
 Subject: Re: IML: 69 Imperial Failed 
    Emissions
 Date: Wed, 28 Jun 2006 00:01:53 -0700
 
 
 High CO tends 
    to come from an overly rich air-fuel mixture and/or 
    unburned
 fuel.
 
 I don't know the state of tune of your car or the 
    last time the carb was
 rebuilt, but if it's dumping in too much fuel or 
    not using it up, you should
 be able to get the car to pass by addressing 
    one or both of those. Start
 with the easy stuff: fresh spark plugs 
    (Autolite #85), properly set timing,
 a fresh oil change, tank of gas and 
    air filter. After that, consider a carb
 rebuild, new plug wires and/or 
    even a new ignition coil, as a weak spark
 will result in poor 
    combustion.
 
 One thing I always make sure of before a smog check is to 
    drive the car for
 a good half-hour on the freeway, with a few good 
    sprints for good luck.
 Often an under-warmed-up engine will register high 
    hydrocarbon levels rather
 than high CO, but high HC is also a result of 
    unburned fuel (or in the case
 of newer cars, a catalytic converter not 
    yet fully warmed up, not an issue
 with your '69).
 
 What state do 
    you live in, and what kind of emissions testing do they do?
 (In CA, the 
    car goes onto a dyno and they test at 15 mph and 25 mph, so it's
 a pretty 
    grueling, or at least revealing, test.) 3.75% CO is a very high
 standard 
    (meaning not stringent). Also, what's the odometer mileage on 
    your
 car?
 
 Here are the results of the last time I had my '78 NYB 
    smogged. Granted,
 it's a 17,000-mile car with a Electronic Lean Burn and 
    a catalyst, but note
 the maximum allowable levels and how far my car 
    comes from it, since this
 engine was not originally available in CA 
    because it failed to meet emission
 standards. I offer this only as 
    encouragement that a proper state of tune
 can help a lot, even on a car 
    that's obviously only driven very
 occasionally.
 
 ------
 All 
    numbers are listed as MAX / AVG / MEAS, where:
 - MAX = the legal maximum 
    allowed before the car fails
 - AVG = the average figures for all passing 
    vehicles
 - MEAS = my car's readings
 
 15 mph MAX / AVG / 
    MEAS
 ------ -------------------
 HC (ppm): 175 / 47 / 33
 CO (%): 
    1.17 / 0.20 / 0.13
 NO (ppm): 1215 / 554 / 
    492
 -----------------------------
 25 mph
 ------ 
    -------------------
 HC (ppm): 142 / 37 / 43
 CO (%): 0.97 / 0.17 / 
    0.12
 NO (ppm): 1075 / 468 / 
    468
 -----------------------------
 
 Hope this was helpful. Let us 
    know what you do and how much it helps!
 
 Chris in LA
 67 Crown 
    (125,000 miles, and always passed when it had to be tested)
 78 NYB Salon 
    (just a 17,000-mile baby)
 
 
 On 6/27/06 10:53 PM, john sadowski at 
    jsadowski@xxxxxxx wrote:
 
 > Well, Its that time again. I had to go 
    through emmissions 4 times last year
 > before finally passing. I went 
    today & it failed the carbon monoxide test
 > under load. The 
    standard is 3.75 & it went through at 4.98. The other 3
 > tests 
    passed by a very comfortable margin. They were supposed to be
 > 
    exempting collector cars here, but the law has yet to take affect & 
    they
 > don't know if it will. I've been driving the 69 occassionally 
    now & it runs
 > pretty well. I was surprised that it didn't 
    pass.
 > John
 >
 >
 >
 >
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 This message was sent to 
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 reply to 
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 shared with 
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 Administrators 
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 |