Engine 91 mustang 302 Low acceleration car backfires pops and acts like it doesn’t want to take fuel

I have a 1991 Mustang 5.0. I have a bad hesitation at low acceleration and the car pops, backfires and acts like it doesn’t want to take fuel. Holley systemax intake, accufab 70mm throttle body, EGR delete, ecam and Estreet heads, 24lb injectors, pro m mass air, MSD coil.
Car runs great at idle and full throttle.
We have replaced or checked TPS, IAC, Coil, distributor, plugs, wires, fuel pump, no vacuum leaks. cleaned and checked 10 pin, new A9L computer, checked fuel pressure, changed Mass Air meter, timing advanced 12degrees, we’ve checked grounds and ran codes. Only codes are 31,81,82,84,85 and pretty positive we have ruled those out.
At a loss right now on what it could be. Anyone have any ideas?
 
You can use this to simulate the EGR if you do not want to research and find how to build the simulator yourself.

 
Assuming the MAF is calibrated for the 24’s? Did you buy the car like this or did this just all of a sudden happen or ???
Car was good until I blew rear main out. Automatic with GT40 Tubular intake. Fixed that problem and put motor back in. Started having trouble then. We swapped motor to the Holley Systemax intake and 5 speed T5. Still same problems. We are just stumped at this point and we know it has to something simple we are overlooking because the car runs so good at idle and full throttle.
 
O2 wiring harness is pinned different between an auto car and a manual car. Just verify you are good there.



These ECU’s are 30+ years old and we are starting to see them fail in numbers. Most send them to ECU Exchange to have them gone through. Not saying this is your issue but food for thought.


If you are confident in the motor mechanically then you need to start looking for a vacuum leak like Noobz said.


View: https://youtu.be/crc6CJ_ni2w?si=FMNCeMgShFc4Dosp


I just finished one and used 26 ga 316 stainless steel wire. Ended up using approximately 3 feet as that was right at 4 ohms on my DVM so that’s a 3 amp load on a 12V system. Only found one small leak but it worked.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1991Fox5.0
O2 wiring harness is pinned different between an auto car and a manual car. Just verify you are good there.



These ECU’s are 30+ years old and we are starting to see them fail in numbers. Most send them to ECU Exchange to have them gone through. Not saying this is your issue but food for thought.


If you are confident in the motor mechanically then you need to start looking for a vacuum leak like Noobz said.


View: https://youtu.be/crc6CJ_ni2w?si=FMNCeMgShFc4Dosp


I just finished one and used 26 ga 316 stainless steel wire. Ended up using approximately 3 feet as that was right at 4 ohms on my DVM so that’s a 3 amp load on a 12V system. Only found one small leak but it worked.Just got the A9L back from ECU exchange so we know it’s good It was doing it with the old computer as well. We put same motor and transmission back in after rear main fix. Issues started then. Decided to do auto to manual swap and still same trouble.
 
Just got the A9L back from ECU exchange so we know it’s good It was doing it with the old computer as well. We put same motor and transmission back in after rear main fix. Issues started then. Decided to do auto to manual swap and still same trouble. Smoke test is next on the to do list then pulling injectors.
 
  • Like
Reactions: AeroCoupe
So you are using the A9L with the manual, but the car used to be auto? Did you repin the O2 sensor harness jumper to a manual? Not doing this will fry the ECU pin 46 which makes the car run poorly. Not saying this is the cause, but if you aren't sure I would double check this.


I do think you should check for vac leaks. lean backfire when applying load (and good fuel pressure) is a strong sign of a vac leak somewhere.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1991Fox5.0
So you are using the A9L with the manual, but the car used to be auto? Did you repin the O2 sensor harness jumper to a manual? Not doing this will fry the ECU pin 46 which makes the car run poorly. Not saying this is the cause, but if you aren't sure I would double check this.


I do think you should check for vac leaks. lean backfire when applying load (and good fuel pressure) is a strong sign of a vac leak somewhere.