So we have a persistent CEL for MAF. Our pro put a smoke machine on it and found a manifold fitting that was missing an o-ring and not much else. Okay, nothing else. His last-ditch guess was a bad purge valve solenoid on the evap system - it takes a hundred miles or so after a reset for the light to come back on. Maybe the purge cycle is the trigger? During a January road trip we hit up a Pick N Pull in Dallas and grabbed the possibly offending piece. The evap assembly is $400. We aren't willing to gamble that kind of scratch with a Jack-high hand so we didn't order a replacement. Good thing we didn't spring for the new part because our CEL returned. Our pro's informed opinion was it was time to use the electrical tape fix - cover the CEL and go on about our business since the car is running fine. We think he was kidding. Unless he wasn't. He's hard to read sometimes. Naturally, this was all the excuse we needed to stay at the table for another hand by installing a nice new performance intercooler and related hoses. Maybe we would find a heretofore undetected vacuum leak. We worked 4 hours Friday afternoon and finished up Saturday morning. Step 1: start taking stuff off the car.
The intercooler was sold as a complete kit with hoses and a new air intake tube.
The IC is well-made and fit perfectly. Fitment was a pleasant surprise as the new is 1.5x as thick as the old one. Here's a look at both:
The IC included detailed instructions for replacement without pulling the bumper cover. Hooray for pictures with instructions! Things are getting buttoned back up. This hose, which runs from the IC to the turbo was the only really hard part.
Fist-bump to eEuroparts for this kit, which went together perfectly. We ended up pulling the driver-side headlight to get at a bolt that was eluding our wrench but in retrospect we might have managed with more wiggling of the AC condenser/IC assembly.
We keep finding things that are missing (as Yogi Berra might have said). There is clearly a bolt hole in the bottom of the turbo compressor housing.
Since the Swedes are more clever than our prior owner, we concluded something was intended to go there and we were right. A lower turbo bracket is on order following a quick consultation with the assembly manual.
In this photo our drop light is partially concealing a sensor on the air intake pipe. The new pieces are sightly more, let's say robust than the stock pieces and the sensor pigtail occupied the same space as the BCV.
So we flipped the sensor. Problem solved.
A while-there project was to replace a gasket on the air filter housing that had shrunk to the point of breaking.
All finished. Well, except for a couple of hose clamps on our new MAF coupler.
Why did we choose dumb-kid blue? We don't like it either, but months ago when we were replacing some small vacuum lines the only color in stock was blue, so we stuck with it. Given our druthers we would use black. We found a loose clamp on an intercooler hose but the CEL persists. There is electrical tape in the toolbox, but we are going to try to draw to an inside straight and send the MAF back to eEuroparts for testing. The tape fix will have to wait a little longer.