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Engine stuttering/dying and loss of accelerator

Motor Vehicle Maintenance & Repair Asked on December 29, 2020

I had recently bought a 1998 Gen 3 Subaru legacy (BH5) with 190k Kms/ 118k Miles on it, for the first month it ran perfect with zero issues. Suddenly one day I started up the car as I was reversing out I could hear and feel the engine cylinders become more erratic and slow down until 3 seconds later the entire car died. I cranked the car again and then as if nothing happened I drove home without a hitch.

After the first incident, a few days later while I was driving it occurred again, the engine started to stutter, and would slowly die – prior to the engine going out 3-5 seconds before, the accelerator pedal would become unresponsive, no matter how far down I pushed there would be no acceleration at all as if I hasn’t even touched the pedal. Then again after the car dies I restart and its usually normal again. These incidents would begin to occur more and more until a week later now it happens ~ every 2 days.

I found a video of my exact same car, this is a identical 1:1 of how the engine behaves, moves and sounds on mine (video at 0:50 – 1:30)

https://youtu.be/uUMFOQcvKtg?t=51

I checked the fuel fuse, it was fine but I replaced it anyways, had a battery and alternator check and they were fine. I took it to a mechanic who took it for an entire days test drive along roads and hill and it wouldn’t play up even once. He checked the engine and said the sparks and leads were all good, he did a scan and it showed up with zero codes. so now I’m left wondering what it could be, my only guess is the fuel pump or filter has an issue as I’m told on many older cars they don’t sensor codes for it – but when I suggested it to the mechanic he said probably not but didn’t give a reason why and just said bring it in again.

Anybody have any thoughts on what might be going on?

2 Answers

Hmmm. Were you seeing a fuel related system, I'm pretty sure you'd see a check engine light and code for that model year car. The fact that you don't see codes tells me to start checking things that don't normally send out codes.

--Loose battery clamp or ground wire somewhere.
--Spark plug troubles / ignition wiring system ground out somewhere / ignition module issues. --Blockage in fresh air intake. --Vacuum leak somewhere.

Let us know what you find.

Answered by zipzit on December 29, 2020

The most common reasons why your car is having trouble accelerating is due to three main categories:

Actuator Malfunction – bad spark plugs, faulty fuel pump, damaged fuel injectors, old fuel wiring, and other fuel component issues Sensor Malfunction – damaged oxygen sensor, faulty mass airflow sensor, broken crankshaft sensor, camshaft position sensor malfunctioning, and sensors in the EFI system Mechanical Problems – dirty and clogged exhaust manifold, broken or dirty air filter, clogged fuel filter, reduced compression.

Check the last point as this is the most potent cause of this malfunction.

Answered by Olayanju Biodun on December 29, 2020

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