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Porsche Maintenance Washington DC

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Porsche Maintenance. You will find informative articles about Porsche Maintenance, including "Porsche Engine Diagnostics: Misfire Codes, Fuel Trim Faults, Secondary Air Injection". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Washington, DC that can help answer your questions about Porsche Maintenance.

Wagonwork Collision
(571) 210-2515
3406 Jefferson Davis Hwy
Alexandria, VA
AMMCO Marlow heights
(301) 909-5978
3501 Pohanka
Marlow heights, MD
Beltway Auto Care Inc
(301) 909-5947
11844 Coakley Cir
Rockville, MD
Superior Auto Service
(301) 541-3990
12298 Wilkins Ave
Rockville, MD
Auto Body Clinic
(301) 244-0849
7402 Westmore Rd # A
Rockville, MD
Fort Washington Auto Body and Repair
(301) 965-0646
6100 Livingston Road
Oxon Hill, MD
AAMCO
(571) 482-8997
632 S. Pickett St.
Alexandria, VA
Preferred Automotive
(301) 836-1569
12356 Wilkins Avenue
Rockville, MD
County Transmissions Inc
(703) 345-9943
320 Dominion Rd NE
Vienna, VA
Jacob's Autorama Inc.
(301) 202-2979
107 N Stonestreet Ave
Rockville, MD
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Porsche Engine Diagnostics: Misfire Codes, Fuel Trim Faults, Secondary Air Injection

By Larry Bailly  
June 16, 2009

Porsche has been building engines for decades that will literally fit in a suitcase, but are still able to put out horsepower that rivals many larger engines. Find out how to keep the Porsche Boxster engine running smoothly.

I have been intrigued by automotive engineering and design since I was about 10 years old. The auto show was a big deal each year, and we always attended to get a chance to sit in some of the new cars from all over the world. In the 1950s, looking at the foreign cars was a big hit for me, simply because the small cars better matched my size, and they seemed to have fewer gadgets on them.

The dashboards had gauges and that was quite different than the American cars of that time; they just had “idiot” lights. I do remember, however, that the early cars from Porsche were a little different. The engine was in the back, there was no big grille on the front and there were very few gauges on the dash. Mostly just a speedometer and a tachometer, whatever they were for!

Times have changed since then, but my interest in automotive engineering still drives me to try and learn as much as I can about how stuff works, and why it was done a certain way. Today’s engineers and designers have a difficult balance to arrive at a vehicle that will meet government standards, look and drive well, and get reasonable fuel economy.

Porsche has been the leader in automotive design and engineer...

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