K4fxd
Well-Known Member
That's 5,000 ohms. The K on the range display means thousands.Spark plugs don't look bad. Have you ohm all them to check the internal resistor wasn't broken? All my spark plugs showed 5 ohm on my voltmeter
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That's 5,000 ohms. The K on the range display means thousands.Spark plugs don't look bad. Have you ohm all them to check the internal resistor wasn't broken? All my spark plugs showed 5 ohm on my voltmeter
Cheapest non expensive way would be swapping coils around but you could number them with a marker to keep track of the original cylinder you removed them from. Other option would be buying a new set if you can't get a hold of a set to test out.I’m a little surprised by possibly being the coils. There’s 23k miles on the car. I can understand one going bad or possibly 2 at the same time, but I’ve got misfires all over the place lol. It could be and I certainly appreciate the help! Is there a range the coils should be in if I tested resistance? As you said, could be difficult to test though. Unfortunately don’t think I want to start taking stuff off a buddies car to test and don’t have another set of coils.
I’ve got a few hours tomorrow to try to dig in some more. What else can I try to check for intake gasket leak? Will be difficult to get it right at the blower/head junction. Idled pretty steady as it is now, so what should I notice if indeed there is a leak? I’m a little reluctant to try something really flammable. But I do know they would increase idle speed. By how much though? How noticeable?
Correct 5k ohmThat's 5,000 ohms. The K on the range display means thousands.
I’ve been going over everything in the engine bad and checking grounds, vacuum lines, clamps and haven’t found anything suspect.Bad ground somewhere?
Good thing is you can eliminate vacuum leak from the list. I agree with the previous statement to check grounds and any corrosion. Is your battery fully charging? Something is causing this misfire and its even weird that it got worst when you switched coils around. Is fuel pressure solid? Did you mention before that your pcm was replaced? If so what caused the previous failure?Thanks Mike. I think that’s the next step. Did the crank relearn (Misfire Monitor Neutral Profile Correction) in Forscan without change.
Plugs will at least eliminate that variable.
Pump connections and BAP were fine...
This started when you was trying to make a pull a day or so ago? The only other thing that haven't been fully eliminated yet is the injectors, if coils are fully functioning, and new plugs? What fuel do you run >91+ or e85? I'm not familiar with the ngauge but will it store codes if the engine light kicks on? Reason why I ask because after you reset the KAM the issue should pop up as a code. I know with my SCT scanner it stores the codes. Sometimes a lil drive around the block will allow the code to pop up after a KAM reset. No hard driving though. Fuel pressure gauge will eliminate fuel delivery to the engine if you can rent the loaner tool from your local part store. Only thing it would narrow down to if needing replaced is new spark plugs, rear camshaft sensors(which they help regulate coil timing events), and coils. Seems like you have checked everything else.PCM has never been replaced. Car has rarely seen rain - when I get caught out in it. Never driven in the winter. AFR through pulls is spot on. No fuel pressure gauge though. No codes. Have not had any battery issues. When car is not going to be driven it goes on a battery tender. Stored winter indoors in a heated garage.
Switching coils around didn’t make a difference. I switched them back and same thing.
Frustrating for sure.
An idle relearn, not crank relearnYes. Several times. No changes. I’ve done it with the nGauge and also Forscan and neither made a difference.