My 77 Gremlin has been at the smog test shop for the last two days. I had installed a used EGR valve on the car when I rehabbed it and I also employed a used air diverter valve downstream of the air pump. The EGR units held vacuum and seemed to respond to the vacuum signal so I thought it was OK. I just trusted that the diverter valve functioned OK. The smog tech said the EGR was working somewhat but was not completely functional. A nonfunctioning EGR means a categorical failure of the smog test. The valve was not responding to the vacuum signal completely. So he went on a search for a replacement valve. I had been through this before. Rockauto lists a total of seven EGR valves so I had purchased a universal valve from them and it did not work. The back pressure sensing port was different. The smog test tech had the same experience. There were six possible EGR valves listed from his supplier. The first valve he purchased had a difference back pressure sensing arrangement. He has the advantage of having a parts supplier who brought two more valves for him to try on the car, without having to pay for the parts that didn't work. Problem solved. The second problem was high hydrocarbon output on the 2500 rpm test. The tech traced the problem to a non-functioning air diverter valve today. You almost can't find these things new any more, so he asked me if I had another one at home. It turns out that I do have a couple of extra valves here at home. So I will replace it this weekend and hopefully my Gremmie will be blessed by the smog gods on Monday. So my advice is if you have an AMC which needs the emission equipment to be legal, hang on to those old emission control parts. Some of them are getting scarce. Joe Fulton Salinas, CA _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list