1992 Chevy Blazer Passing emmission for inspection

Tiny
KEITH7275
  • MEMBER
  • 1992 CHEVROLET BLAZER
  • V8
  • 4WD
  • AUTOMATIC
  • 197,000 MILES
I have a 1992 K1500 Chevy Blazer that just failed NJ state inspection because my hydrocarbon level was way too high.I passed nox and co%. The readings were nox standard 1301 I had 282 co% standard 1.03 I had.67 and HC standard 123 I failed with a 523. What can I do to pass the test and in what order should I repair the truck. I want to try to fix the least expensive things first. Thanks for your help.
Saturday, December 27th, 2008 AT 1:39 PM

1 Reply

Tiny
RASMATAZ
  • MECHANIC
  • 75,992 POSTS
Hydrocarbon failures mean unburned gasoline is passing through the engine and entering the exhaust. The three most common causes include ignition misfire, lean misfire and low compression (typically a burned exhaust valve). Ignition misfire can be caused by worn or fouled spark plugs, bad plug wires or a weak coil. Lean misfire results where there is too much air and not enough fuel, so check for vacuum leaks, dirty injectors or a fuel delivery problem. In addition to these, hydrocarbon failures can also be caused by oil burning due to worn valve guides, valve guide seals and/or rings.
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Saturday, December 27th, 2008 AT 5:43 PM

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