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P0442

DTC P0442 EVAPORATIVE EMISSION SYSTEM SMALL LEAK

Circuit Description
The evaporative (EVAP) emission system includes the following components:
- Fuel tank.
- EVAP emission vent solenoid.
- Fuel tank pressure sensor.
- Fuel pipes and hoses.
- Fuel vapor lines.
- Fuel cap.
- EVAP emission canister.
- Purge lines.
- EVAP emission canister purge valve.
- EVAP emission service port.

The EVAP emission system is checked by applying vacuum to the EVAP emission system and monitoring for a vacuum decay. The powertrain control module (PCM)/engine control module (ECM) monitors the vacuum level through the fuel tank pressure sensor signal.
At the appropriate time, the EVAP emission canister purge valve and the EVAP emission vent solenoid are turned ON, allowing the engine to draw a small vacuum on the entire evaporative emission system. After the desired vacuum level has been achieved, the EVAP emission canister purge valve is turned OFF, sealing the system. A leak is detected by monitoring for a decrease in the vacuum level over a given time period, when all other variables remain constant. A small leak in the system will cause DTC P0442 to be set.

Conditions for Setting the DTC
- DTC(s) P0106, P0107, P0108, P0112, P0113, P0117, P0118, P0121, P0122, P0123, P0131, P0132, P0133, P0134, P0135, P0137, P0138, P0140, P0141, P0201, P0202, P0203, P0204, P0300, P0402, P0404, P0405, P0406, P0443, P0449, P0452, P0453, P0506, P0507, P1130, P1133, P1134, P1627 and P1640 will not set.
- Intake air temperature (IAT) is between 4 °C and 34 °C (39 °F and 93 °F) at engine start up.
- Engine Coolant Temperature (ECT) is between 4 °C and 34 °C (39 °F and 93 °F) at engine start up.
- Barometric Pressure (BAR0) is greater than 68 kPa.
- ECT is not more then 7 °C (12 °F) greater than the intake at temperature at start up.
- Vehicle speed is less than or equal to 90 mph.
- Fuel tank level is between 10% and 90%.
- The Throttle Position (TP) sensor is less than or equal to 100%.
- The change in fuel tank pressure is less than or equal to 24.9 in H2O.
- The vapor pressure slope is less than or equal to 0.061 in H2O/sec.
- System voltage is between 11 volt and 16 volt.
- No fuel slosh and the change in fuel level percent is 21 counts in 0.125 sec.

Action Taken When the DTC Sets
- The Malfunction Indicator Lamp (MIL) will illuminate.
- The PCM/ECM will record operating conditions at the time the diagnostic fails. This information will be stored in the Freeze Frame and Failure Records buffers.
- A history DTC is stored.
- Coolant fan turns on.

Conditions for Clearing the MIL/DTC
- The MIL will turn off after three consecutive ignition cycles in which the diagnostic runs without a fault.
- A history DTC will clear after 80 consecutive warm-up cycles without a fault.
- DTC(s) can be cleared by using the scan tool.

Diagnostic Aids
Although this DTC is considered a type A diagnostic (refer to "Powertrain Control Module/Engine Control Module"), it acts like a type B diagnostic under certain conditions. Whenever this diagnostic reports the system has passed, or if the battery is disconnected, the diagnostic must fail twice before setting a DTC. The initial failure is not reported to the diagnostic executive or displayed on a scan tool. A passing system always reports to the diagnostic executive immediately.
Check for the following conditions:
- Missing or damaged O-rings at fuel vapor and EVAP emission purge line canister fittings.
- Cracked or punctured EVAP emission canister.
- Damaged source vacuum line, EVAP emission purge line, EVAP emission vent hose or fuel tank vapor line.
- Poor connection at PCM/ECM. Inspect harness connectors for the following conditions:
- Backed-out terminals
- Improper mating
- Broken locks
- Improperly formed
- Damaged terminals
- Poor terminal-to-wire connection

- Damaged harness. Inspect the wiring harness to the EVAP emission vent solenoid EVAP emission canister purge valve and the fuel tank pressure sensor for an intermittent open or short circuit.

Steps 1 To 6:




Steps 7 To 12:




Step 13:




Test Description
Number(s) below refer to the step number(s) on the Diagnostic Table.
1. The On-Board Diagnostic (OBD II) System Check prompts the technician to complete some basic checks and store the freeze frame and failure records data on the scan tool if applicable. This creates an electronic copy of the data taken when the malfunction occurred. The information is then stored on the scan tool for later reference.
2. If a vent solenoid or EVAP emission canister purge valve electrical malfunction is present, the purge system will not operate correctly. Repairing the electrical malfunction will very likely correct the condition that set DTC P0442.
3. Checks the fuel tank pressure sensor at ambient pressure.
5. Forces the fuel tank pressure sensor to re-zero.
6. Verifies that the fuel tank pressure sensor accurately reacts to EVAP emission system pressure changes.