Car bogs down and gets slightly hot in highway cruising speeds
Asked by JArcher1346 Jun 20, 2017 at 05:29 PM about the 1995 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme 4 Dr S Sedan
Question type: Maintenance & Repair
Hello I have a 95 Oldsmobile cutlass sl. It overheats just
slightly when I get on the freeway and then bogs down
and won't accelerate and eventually dies out. I wait for 15
- 20 minutes and it does fine again until it gets hot. Just
replaced about everything to do with the cooling system.
Not sure why this is happening PLEASE HELP
16 Answers
JArcher1346 answered 7 years ago
No I didn't I just changed the coolant temp sensor today and that seemed to help a little bit. Where is that located?
JArcher1346 answered 7 years ago
It runs just fine until I reach high speed then it sputters and bogs out and won't respond to me pushing on throttle, I pull over and it idles rough then shuts off
JArcher1346 answered 7 years ago
It stays at this temp in the picture. Fan kicks on without ac on. There is also a high loud pitch sound, idk if that has anything to do with it.
JArcher1346 answered 7 years ago
195 I believe. I just don't understand why when I get on the high it will bog down
JArcher1346 answered 7 years ago
Yeah now I just figured it doesn't matter for high speeds. I let it idle just now for 15 mins then put it in gear and it started bogging out
Put in bypass pipe for catalytic converter, GM used a pellet type and sometimes the pellets would fuse to the barrier in the unit.
JArcher1346 answered 7 years ago
Ok, what about removing the thermostat and leaving it off? Will that affect anything?
JArcher1346 answered 7 years ago
It ildes good for the first twenty or so minutes then it starts to idle at low rpms and pretty roughly
No. You need a thermostat to make the engine run at the correct temperature. Forget about your cooling system. You can see by your temperature gauge that it's not overheating. It's another problem that occurs at normal operating temperature. I think checking the catalytic converter is a good idea.
JArcher1346 answered 7 years ago
How do I tell if it is bad? The catalytic converter that is
Any muffler shop should be able to evaluate it. That and a repair estimate are free at most shops.
If possible, without damaging the rest of the system, unclamp/unbolt the catalytic and put in a bypass pipe. OR get an exhaust pressure tester (one is made by ashcroft) and plug in where the O2 sensor goes, the exhaust pressure should not go above 2 - 3 psi