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Fix Engine Misfire: Common Causes and Solutions

Engine Misfire: Causes and Fixes You Need to Know

An engine misfire can be frustrating and worrisome for any vehicle owner. A misfire causes a rough idling, shaky acceleration, or even a blinking check engine lights. Addressing engine misfires promptly is crucial to prevent further damage and maintain optimal vehicle performance. This comprehensive guide will walk you through the steps to diagnose and fix engine misfires effectively.

Understanding Engine Misfires

An engine misfire occurs when there is an incomplete combustion cycle in one or more cylinders of your engine. This can be caused by various factors including:

• Ignition System Issues— The most common cause of an engine misfire. It can be caused by a worn or faulty spark plug, ignition coil, or ignition wires.
• Fuel System Problems— The second most common cause of engine misfires. If the misfire is fuel-related, it’s usually due to too little fuel in the combustion chamber, causing the combustion to end too early. However, in some cases, too much fuel can also cause an engine misfire. So clogged or inoperative fuel injectors, a bad fuel pump or fuel pressure regulator, or even a clogged fuel filter can cause a fuel-related misfire problem.

• Air and Vacuum Leaks— A vacuum leak or a leak in the air intake system can cause a lean misfire condition, where there’s too much air mixed with too little fuel, causing the combustion event to end early.
• Mechanical Issues— Mechanical issues like a worn camshaft, worn timing chain, leaking valves, and worn piston rings can cause an engine misfire.

Step-by-Step Guide to Fixing Engine Misfires

1. Diagnose the location of the misfire using the trouble code—

Get the trouble codes read. They’ll tell you which cylinder is misfiring. The code will appear as a powertrain “P” code starting with 0300. For example, a P0301 code means there’s a misfire in cylinder #1.

2. Start by inspecting the spark plug, spark plug wires, and the ignition coil for signs of a problem— 

• The gap is too large. That’s the sign of a worn-out spark plug.

spark plug center electrode condition

Notice the rounded over edge on the center electrode.

• The center electrode is rounded over. Ignition sparks create the most heat when they jump from a sharp edge to another sharp edge. A rounded-over center electrode is a sign of a worn-out spark plug.
• Fouled spark plug— Excessive carbon buildup from worn piston rings or a rich fuel mixture can cause a spark plug to misfire

3) Check the condition of the ignition coil—

Look for signs of arcing or burn-through. A burn-through means the 40,000 volts couldn’t jump the gap in the spark plug and instead fired through the side of the ignition coil

• Faulty ignition coil — Driving too long on a misfiring spark plug causes the ignition co

coil on plug ignition coil comparison

Misfiring coil on plug ignition coil. Notice the arcing on the bottom coil. The spark has been shooting righ through the side of the coil above the boot.

il to overheat, degrade, and fail. Ignition coils can fail even without a bad spark plug, but that’s rare.

4) Check for the proper fuel pressure and volume—

Conduct a fuel pressure and fuel volume test to make sure the fuel injectors are getting the proper pressure and volume.

• Clogged fuel injector — Using the fuel pressure gauge, fire each fuel injector and note the pressure drop. If there’s no pressure drop or one cylinder has a lower pressure drop than the others, suspect a clogged fuel injector. An injector that’s not delivering enough fuel can cause a misfire.

5) Check for unmetered air—

The ECM has to know how much air is coming into the engine so it can calculate the proper fuel mixture. A disconnected vacuum hose, crack in the air intake duct, or a leaking intake manifold can let in unmetered air.

• Check for a vacuum leak

• Check for tears or cracks in the plastic air intake duct that runs from the air filter box to the throttle body.

6) Check for mechanical problems—

I’ll confess, this is the hardest to diagnose. You’ll have to rent test equipment to check for cylinder compression and cylinder leakdown.

• Perform a wet and dry compression test. A dry compression test checks the condition of the valves. A wet compression test checks the condition of the piston rings.

• Perform a cylinder leakdown test. This test tells you where the cylinder is leaking.

What Causes a P0300 Random misfire?

When you see a P0300 random misfire code, it means the computer is detecting engine misfires but can’t nail down which cylinder(s) are causing the problem. Here are the most common causes of a P0300 misfire code.

• Worn spark plugs— If they all have the same number of miles, then they could all misfire on a random basis

Worn spark plug

Worn spark plug

• Worn spark plug wires—If they all have the same number of miles, then they could all misfire on a random basis
• Vacuum leak— A vacuum leak would affect all cylinders the same, so it can cause a P0300.
• Unmetered air— Same as a vacuum leak

fix engine misfire

Tear in air intake hose that allows unmetered air into the engine

• Fuel supply problems like low fuel pressure or bad fuel pressure regulator. Check fuel pressure and perform a fuel volume test

How to diagnose a single cylinder misfire

1) If the engine has spark plug wires: Use a spray bottle to

engine misfire

Arcing from deteriorated spark plug wires

mist the spark plug wires and check for arcing on the plug wire to the misfiring cylinder. If you find arcing, replace the entire set of spark plug wires.

a) If the engine uses coil-on-plug ignition coils, examine the coil from the misfiring cylinder. Check for evidence of fire-through. If you can’t see any failure signs, swap the coil from the misfiring cylinder with a coil from another cylinder. If the coil is bad, the misfire code will show on the different cylinder.

coil on plug ignition coil comparison

Misfiring coil on plug ignition coil. Notice the arcing on the bottom coil. The spark has been shooting righ through the side of the coil above the boot.

 

2 Remove the spark plug from the cylinder and check the spark plug gap. Check the porcelain for signs of carbon tracking. Even if the plug appears good, replace it and apply dielectric grease to the porcelain. Then retest

3) Perform a compression test and a cylinder leak-down test to check the condition of the valve and valve seats. If leak-down is 10% or greater, you have a wear problem that requires a valve job.

fix engine misfire

Cylinder leakdown tester

4) If the leak-down test shows less than 10%, swap the fuel injector with another cylinder and see if the misfire follows to the new cylinder

What causes a two-cylinder engine misfire code?

Determine the type of ignition system. If you have a

DIS coil pack

DIS coil pack. Each coil powers two cylinders

distributorless ignition system (DIS), you’ll see individual coil packs or one large coil with spark plug wire towers for each cylinder. In a DIS ignition system, each coil pack provides ignition for two cylinders. Here’s how it works: Two pistons reach top dead center at the same time. One cylinder is at the top dead center of the compression stroke and the partner cylinder is at top dead center of the exhaust stroke. The ignition call sends high voltage to the  center electrode of the compression spark plug. The

Ignition coil

DIS Ignition coil

spark jumps the gap to the side electrode, producing a hot spark to ignite the air/fuel mixture. The voltage flows through the engine block and jumps from the side electrode to the center electrode on the spark plug of the exhaust stroke cylinder. The voltage then flows up through the spark plug wire and back to the coil pack. So a fault anywhere in that system will result in TWO misfire codes.

How to diagnose two engine misfire codes in a DIS ignition system

1) If the engine has spark plug wires: Use a spray bottle to mist the spark plug wires and check for arcing on the plug wire to the misfiring cylinder. If you find arcing, replace the entire set of spark plug wires.
2) If the coils are separate, swap the coils and see if the misfires move to the new location.
3) Remove the spark plugs and wires and check for spark plug gaps, and wire connections. Replace and check for misfire codes again.
4) Perform a cylinder leak-down test to check the condition of the valve and valve seats. If the leak-down is 10% or greater, you have a wear problem that requires a valve job.

Diagnose engine misfires when cold

This gets a bit tricky because engines often rotate at a slower speed when cold and a slower rotation can cause misfires. Some of the same checks listed above apply. But follow these checks in order.

1 Check oil level and viscosity. If you’re using the wrong oil viscosity (thick oil), it can slow engine cranking to the point of causing cold misfires

2 Check last oil change. If you’ve exceeded the recommended oil change interval, the oil may be degraded to the point where it is too thick

2 If the engine has spark plug wires: Use a spray bottle to mist the spark plug wires and check for arcing on the plug wire to the misfiring cylinder. If you find arcing, replace the entire set of spark plug wires.

Multiple engine misfires or no start

The engine cranks but will not fire up. The causes can be:

• no spark caused by bad spark plugs, bad wires, bad ignition coil, bad crankshaft or camshaft position sensor
• no fuel caused by bad fuel pump, clogged fuel injectors, no fuel injector signal due to bad crankshaft or camshaft position sensor. Use scan tool to check for short and long term fuel trim and crank and camshaft signals.

For more tips on diagnosing engine misfires, read this post

©, 2017 Rick Muscoplat

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