IF THE SENSOR HAS BEEN IDENTIFIED AS CARBON-FOULED
Cleaning and Testing the Fuel Pressure Regulator
The FPR is located at the end of the fuel rail in an EFi engine. Some EFi cars don't have a FPR. The FPR reads the manifold pressure to regulate the opening of a valve in the FPR. IF the vacuum is high (such as idling, engine braking), the valve opens more and more fuel is returned to the tank, thus lower fuel pressure. If the vacuum is low (such as WOT or underload), the FPR opens less, thus less fuel is returned to the tank, and higher fuel pressure. This mechanism is not controlled by the ECU. However, if O2 sensors feedback shows rich burning at close-loop operation at any fuel pressure, the ECU will increase the pulse width of the injectors, thus injecting less fuel, at the same given pressure if rich burning is not present.
To clean and test the FPR. Take it out, fill it with petrol from the inlet port. Shake it hard, pour it out. You will be surprised to see thoudsands of tiny black particles of different sizes. Those are neoprene debris from the disintergrating fuel hose (the portion from the charcoal canister to the fuel rail). These debris, accumulating in the FPR valve, blocking the return path, making your car running on extra high fuel pressure and burning rich at open-loop operation. Producing eccessive unburnt HC in the exhaust stream, fouling the O2 sensor, reducing it sensitivity... and you know what happen next -- worsen FC and lost of drivability!
Clean it several times until you can`t observe any debris from the pour-out. Use a white tissue paper so that you can see the tiny particles clearer. I bet you need to do it at leas 10 times. It`s better if you have an ultrasonic bath, just give the FPR a bath for 20 minutes with the inlet port facing bottom, in petrol or ethanol, NOT WATER!.
After cleaning and completely drying the FPR (I use an electrical oven at 50 deg C, you may try a hair dryer), run a vacuum test on the air chamber. Connect a 60-cc shringe to the vacuum port. Fill the fuel chamber with some petrol. Pull the shringe all the way back and hold it for a minute. If there`s any liquid coming out of the air chamber, the diaphragm is cracked or leaking. Get a new one. IF it`s good at this stage, do the pressure test on the inlet port.
Similarly, using the same 60-cc shringe, connected to the inlet port with a proper fitting, pump the piston down. A 60-cc shringe when fully pump down, should generate about 40-50 psi of pressure. That`s about the WOT fuel pressure of many models. You may want to calibrate the shringe using a pressure gauge before this. Just connect the pressure gauge to the shringe and mark the shringe with the corresponding pressure for each 5cc compression. During the test, slowly pump it down and record the pressure required to open the valve. The compressed air will be vented out from the return port when the valve is opened. As a point of reference, WOT fuel pressure for Wira 1.5 EFi is about 42psi. If it requires > or < 5psi (considering the error in the pressure reading) to open the valve, it`s out. Get a new one.
Cleaning and Testing the Fuel Injectors
The above-mentioned debris will get into the injectors and accumulate in the valve too. You will either get (1 or more of) them stuck-open of stuck-close. This doesn`t mean that a stuck injector will not function, but, a stuck-open injector will result in rich burning, and vise versa for a stuck-close one. Sent the injectors for cleaning and testing. You can`t afford to have the instrument to do it, unlike those used in cleaning and testing the FPR.
By doing these two services, you will almost cartainly gain back the lost power and improve the FC. Hope these help.
note: I have personally done the FPR cleaning and testing (photos later). But I need to send my car for injectors cleaning in Autochild.