The evaporative system includes the following components:
• | The fuel tank. |
• | The EVAP canister vent valve. |
• | The fuel tank pressure sensor. |
• | The fuel pipes and hoses. |
• | The fuel cap. |
• | The EVAP vapor lines. |
• | The EVAP purge lines. |
• | The evaporative emission canister. |
• | The EVAP purge valve. |
The evaporative leak detection diagnostic strategy is based on applying vacuum to the EVAP system and monitoring vacuum decay. The PCM monitors vacuum level via the Fuel Tank Pressure sensor input. At an appropriate time, the EVAP purge valve and the EVAP canister vent valve are turned ON, allowing engine vacuum to draw a small vacuum on the entire evaporative emission system. After the desired vacuum level has been achieved, the EVAP purge valve is turned OFF, sealing the system. A leak is detected by monitoring for a decrease in vacuum level over a given time period, all other variables remaining constant. A small leak in the system will cause DTC P0442 to be set.
• | No VSS, TP sensor, HO2S, Misfire, IAT sensor, MAP sensor, Fuel Trim, Fuel Injector(s), EGR Pintle Position, ECT, or MAF sensor DTCs set. |
• | Start-up ECT between 4°C and 30°C (39°F and 86°F). |
• | Start-up IAT between 4°C and 30°C (39°F and 86°F). |
• | Fuel tank fuel level is between 15% and 85%. |
• | BARO is greater than 75 kPa. |
• | System voltage is between 8 and 16 volts. |
A vacuum decay condition indicating a small leak is detected during the diagnostic test.
• | The PCM will illuminate the MIL during the first trip in which the diagnostic test has been run and failed. |
• | The PCM will store conditions which were present when the DTC set as Freeze Frame and Fail Records data. |
Important: Although these diagnostics are considered type A, they act like type B diagnostics under certain conditions. Whenever the EVAP diagnostics report that the system has passed, or if the battery has been disconnected, the diagnostic must fail during two consecutive cold start trips before setting a DTC. The initial failure is not reported to the diagnostic executive or displayed on a scan tool. A passing system always reports to the diagnostic executive immediately.
• | The PCM will turn the MIL OFF during the third consecutive trip in which the diagnostic has been run and passed. |
• | The history DTC will clear after 40 consecutive warm-up cycles have occurred without a malfunction. |
• | The DTC can be cleared by using the scan tool Clear Info function or by disconnecting the PCM battery feed. |
Check for the following conditions:
• | Cracked or punctured EVAP canister. |
• | Damaged source vacuum line, EVAP purge line, EVAP vent hose or fuel tank vapor line. |
• | Poor connection at PCM. |
Inspect harness connectors for backed out terminals, improper mating, broken locks, improperly formed or damaged terminals, and poor terminal to wire connection. |
• | Damaged harness. |
Inspect the wiring harness to the EVAP canister vent valve EVAP purge valve and the fuel tank pressure sensor for an intermittent open or short circuit. |
Reviewing the Fail Records vehicle mileage since the diagnostic test last failed may help determine how often the condition that caused the DTC to be set occurs. This may assist in diagnosing the condition.
The numbers below refer to the step numbers on the Diagnostic Table:
If an EVAP canister vent valve or EVAP purge valve electrical malfunction is present, the purge system will not operate correctly. Repairing the electrical malfunction will very likely correct the condition that set DTC P0442.
Checks the fuel tank pressure sensor at ambient pressure.
Verifies that the fuel tank pressure sensor accurately reflects EVAP system pressure changes.
Step | Action | Value(s) | Yes | No | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Was the Powertrain OBD System Check performed? | -- | ||||||||
Important: : Visually/physically inspect for the following conditions:
Is DTC P1676 Evaporative Emission (EVAP) Purge Solenoid Control Circuit or DTC P1665 Evaporative Emission (EVAP) Vent Solenoid Control Circuit also set? | -- | Go to the other DTC first | ||||||||
Is Fuel Tank Pressure at the specified value? | 0 in. H2O | Go to DTC P0453 Fuel Tank Pressure Sensor Circuit High Voltage | ||||||||
Important: : Before continuing with diagnosis, zero the EVAP Pressure and Vacuum
(inches of H2O) gauges on the
Is Fuel Tank Pressure at the specified value? | 5 in. H2O | Go to DTC P0452 Fuel Tank Pressure Sensor Circuit Low Voltage | ||||||||
5 |
Does the EVAP pressure decrease to less than the second specified value within 2 minutes? | 15 in. H2O 10 in. H2O | Go to Diagnostic Aids | |||||||
6 |
Can the specified vacuum be maintained? | 5 in. Hg | ||||||||
7 |
Was a problem found? | -- | ||||||||
8 | Replace the EVAP canister vent valve. Refer to Evaporative Emission Vent Valve Replacement . Is the action complete? | -- | -- | |||||||
9 |
Was a problem found? | -- | ||||||||
10 |
Is the action complete? | -- | -- | |||||||
11 |
Does the EVAP pressure decrease to less than the second specified value within 2 minutes? | 15 in. H2O 10 in. H2O | System OK |