2005 Honda Accord Can't Pass Inspection

Discussion in 'Accord' started by murray, Mar 19, 2009.

  1. murray

    murray Guest

    I'm having a problem getting my car approved in its yearly inspection and I
    don't understand why.
    My battery had completely discharged and the mechanic says the computer has
    to go through its own calibration before the car can be accepted.
    In particular he said that the car had to be driven for at least 20 miles at
    60+ mph.
    After this was done, he said there were still 2 problematic "monitors" that
    had to be addressed. Which were:
    1. The car may have excessive gasoline in the tank. He recommended burning
    off gas till the tank was half full.
    2. He said that its possible that there may be excessive vapor in the fuel
    system. (wouldn't that be influenced by item 1.?)
    I am completely puzzled by this whole thing. I always thought that, if there
    was a problem, a sensor would indicate an out range error and point to a
    possible problem component via an error code.
    Why is this situation not conventional?
    The mechanic claims that he has a bulletin document from Honda which
    describes this. Does anyone out there have any knowledge about this?
     
    murray, Mar 19, 2009
    #1
  2. murray

    E. Meyer Guest

    Its pretty normal for all OBD-II cars to have to execute a predefined "drive
    cycle" after the ECM has been reset before the monitors come up "ready". It
    varies from car to car exactly what the sequence is. Be glad you have a
    Honda. Some of the mid-90's Nissans have incredibly convoluted sequences
    that usually take weeks of driving before they come up "ready".
     
    E. Meyer, Mar 19, 2009
    #2
  3. murray

    Tegger Guest



    You need several days of dead-cold to full-hot running which includes as
    many driving situations and speeds as possible.




    This is required because the EVAP tests are not run until the gas tank
    is between 3/4 and 1/4 full. Therefore the EVAP monitors will report
    "not ready" until the tank level declines and those tests are run.





    That assertion doesn't make much sense, unfortunately. Perhaps you've
    misunderstood his words?





    That's correct. But those error codes are generated when a particular
    system fails the test that is run by the engine's computer. If the
    computer never runs the test, you won't get an error code, but you'll
    also have a "not ready" flag in the computer for that monitor.



    I'm not personally aware of any such TSB for the '05 Accord. If your
    mechanic could give you the TSB number and you could pass it along here,
    that would be really nice.
     
    Tegger, Mar 20, 2009
    #3
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