Tom Petty once sang about it: Breakdown

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Houston we have a problem.

My Scout II has a Holly Sniper 2 EFI, and the monitor is showing a high air-fuel ratio. I’m wondering what some possible causes could be. It idles and runs fine, but when I hit the gas, the engine shuts down as the AFR climbs. Of course, I went straight to Grok.

Possible Causes for High (Lean) Air-Fuel Ratio Under Load in Holley Sniper 2 EFI

Based on common troubleshooting for the Holley Sniper EFI system (including the Sniper 2 variant), a high AFR reading—indicating a lean condition (e.g., 16:1 or higher)—under load while idling fine is often tied to fuel delivery shortfalls, sensor inaccuracies, or tuning gaps that only show up when demand spikes. This can trigger a lean shutdown for safety, as the ECU detects potential damage risk. Your symptoms (fine at idle/light load, stalls on throttle tip-in or acceleration) match many user reports on Holley forums, Reddit, and Facebook groups. Here’s a breakdown of the most likely causes, prioritized by frequency in similar cases, with diagnostic tips:

1. Fuel Delivery Problems (Most Common Culprit)

  • Low or Dropping Fuel Pressure Under Load: The pump may hold steady at idle (e.g., 58-60 psi required for Sniper), but weaken at higher RPM/demand due to a failing pump, clogged filter, kinked/restricted lines, or internal regulator clog from degraded fuel. This starves the injectors, causing instant lean spikes and stall.
    • Why under load? Idle uses minimal fuel; acceleration demands 2-3x more.
    • Check: Install an inline fuel pressure gauge (e.g., at the Sniper inlet) and monitor during a WOT stab from idle. Should stay pinned at 58.5 psi—no drops below 55 psi. If it dips, inspect/replace filter, pump, or lines (common in older vehicles like Scouts with routed fuel paths).
  • Clogged/Faulty Injectors or Connectors: One or more injectors not pulsing fully, or loose/corroded connectors causing uneven fuel spray.
    • Check: Listen for injector clicks with a screwdriver stethoscope; swap connectors and datalog individual injector pulse widths for discrepancies.

2. Sensor or Air Metering Issues

  • Faulty Wideband O2 Sensor: The sensor can foul (e.g., from oil blow-by or carbon) or fail, giving false lean readings that mislead the self-tuning. Proximity to exhaust mods (e.g., evac systems) can introduce unburned air, skewing it further.
    • Why under load? Sensor response lags or errors amplify at high flow.
    • Check: Wipe clean (no sprays) or replace (cheap ~$100). Bench-test if possible; relocate bung 12-18″ downstream if exhaust setup allows. Datalog AFR vs. commanded to spot mismatches.
  • Vacuum Leaks or MAP/TPS Faults: Unmetered air entering post-MAP sensor (e.g., cracked intake gasket, loose hose) or TPS not hitting 0% at idle (stuck linkage).
    • Check: Spray carb cleaner around intake/base while idling (RPM rise = leak). Use handheld to verify TPS at 0% closed; adjust slotted screws if needed. Smoke test the intake for leaks.

3. Tuning and ECU Configuration

  • Insufficient Acceleration Enrichment (AE): The Sniper’s self-learn may not add enough fuel on tip-in, especially if base maps are off or learning is disabled/stuck in low-load cells.
    • Why under load? AE only activates on rapid TPS/MAP changes; idle doesn’t trigger it.
    • Check: Connect via USB to Holley EFI software (free download). Review datalogs for AE vs. TPS table—defaults often need +10-20% bump for cams/big engines. Clear Learn Table, re-run wizard, and manually enrich WOT cells (aim 12.5-13:1 target AFR).
  • Timing or Base Fuel Table Mismatch: Low advance under load or fuel table scaled wrong (e.g., MAP axis for boosted vs. NA engine) causes hesitation mimicking lean.
    • Check: Datalog timing—should ramp to 32-36° cruise. Align fuel/timing tables; test simple mode (idle 18°, WOT 32°).

4. Electrical or Ignition Glitches

  • Voltage Drops: Weak battery/alternator or grounds causing ECU/pump stutter under load (e.g., fans kicking in).
    • Check: Monitor voltage (should stay >13V); upgrade grounds/relays if Scout’s off-road wiring is loose.
  • Ignition Misfire: Weak coil or timing sync issues leading to incomplete burns, which the O2 reads as lean.
    • Check: Swap coil; verify HyperSpark (if used) phasing with timing light.

Next Steps for Diagnosis

  • Datalog Everything: Use the Sniper handheld or USB/software to capture a run: Idle 30s, then 3-4 gradual-to-hard throttle pulls. Overlay on base tables to spot lean cells (AFR > commanded by 10%+).
  • Basic Resets: Key-on (don’t crank) to reset TPS; run wizard retune after warm (180°F+).
  • If DIY Stalls: Holley support (techline@holley.com) reviews datalogs free; or find a tuner via EFI System Pro or local dyno (~$100-200). Rare but possible: Bad ECU (warranty replacement).
  • Scout-Specific Note: Off-road vibes can loosen fittings—double-check fuel lines for rubs/pinches and O2 bung for exhaust damage.

Start with fuel pressure—it’s quick and fixes 50% of these. If you share datalog details or pressure readings, I can narrow it further!

She is on the way to the mechanic:

UPDATES:

Pretty sure the pump is dying