Florian wrote:So if I would increase the idle speed way too much, it would run way too fast in neutral and still get worse in gear, depending on how fast I would adjust it, right? Or should I really try it?
We just want to see what happens it is a test. If the truck allows you to drive away then we might have an answer.
Florian wrote:
I found this troubleshooting at another website:
Symptom: The engine will not idle smoothly, or it stalls during idle when the engine is cold. When the engine is cold and you take your foot off the gas pedal, the engine runs very rough and may even stall. When you run the engine at higher speeds, it seems to run fine.
That is a bad choke setting the secret is they said cold. Their possible problems don't take you through a proper choke problem. They did not mention a choke in the problem When an engine is cold it must have a proper choke setting
There may be a vacuum leak.
The Fix: Check and replace vacuum lines as required.
Maybe we don't know yet. Vacuum leaks don't have to be hoses either.
There may be some type of ignition problem.
The Fix: Check and replace distributor cap, rotor, ignition wires and spark plugs.
I will replace spark plugs asap, should I replace the rest also?
It would not hurt but if the engine can idle okay then check the timing before you start replacing the stuff.
The ignition timing may be set wrong.
The Fix: Adjust ignition timing.
Check it
The EGR valve may be bad
Could this be the case?
You don't have an EGR
The engine may have mechanical problems.
The Fix: Check compression to determine engine condition.
A compression check won't hurt.
It could but that was the thrust problem we talked out.