Acura TLX
A practical TLX diagnostic flow: trims and misfire evidence first, then intake/boost leaks (if applicable), then sensor plausibility. Avoid expensive guesswork.
Quick triage (5 minutes)
What to capture
- Codes + freeze-frame
- STFT/LTFT (idle and 2,000 rpm)
- Misfire counters per cylinder (if available)
- MAF g/s (or MAP kPa) at idle + light cruise
- Commanded vs actual boost (turbo models)
What it usually means
- Lean trims at idle only → air leak / PCV / intake leak.
- Lean trims under load → fuel delivery, MAF/MAP bias, or boost leak.
- Random misfire with normal trims → ignition or mechanical, not mixture.
- Long crank after refuel → EVAP purge/vent behaviour.
Common TLX complaints (and the honest starting point)
- Hesitation under load / “boost comes and goes”: treat it like an air-measurement problem first (charge pipe, intercooler couplers, MAP/boost sensor contamination) before condemning a turbo.
- Intermittent misfire at idle: verify trims and EVAP purge behaviour. A purge valve that bleeds vapour can mimic a coil problem.
- Rough cold start (especially short-trip use): look at mixture control, fuel quality, and whether the engine is reaching full operating temp routinely.
- Cooling fan runs often / temperature swings: verify coolant level and ECT plausibility first. A biased temperature reading can trigger protective behaviour without a true overheat.
What NOT to do (high-confidence traps)
- Don’t replace coils/plugs repeatedly without checking misfire counters and mixture control.
- Don’t replace a catalytic converter for P0420 until you’ve proven misfire/trim/O2 behaviour is stable.
- Don’t diagnose a boost complaint without pressure testing the charge system (smoke/pressure test) if trims and boost data suggest leakage.
Typical OBD2 codes you’ll see
P0171
Lean Bank 1: trims-first plan that stops guessing.
P0300
Random misfire: use counters + mixture logic to narrow it.
P0299
Underboost: confirm leak vs control vs sensor bias.
P0420
Catalyst efficiency: upstream issues that masquerade as a bad cat.
Data that settles the argument
If you only log one thing: a short drive log with trims, MAF/MAP, RPM, load, and misfire counts. Most “TLX mystery faults” stop being mysteries when you see whether the ECU is adding fuel, pulling fuel, or dropping torque for protection.
Trust note: These profiles are designed to narrow possibilities. Confirm with test data (trims, misfire counters, pressure/smoke tests, voltage checks) before buying parts.