Have you moved away from the theory of a leaking injector? Or hoping it's something cheaper? :wink:mcbutler said:Got a carly notification of misfire on cylinder 6 - will be swapping coils around to see if it migrates with the coil.
mcbutler said:Got a carly notification of misfire on cylinder 6 - will be swapping coils around to see if it migrates with the coil.
The annoying thing is that all the coils are brand new Bosch and so are the plugs. All done around 300 miles ago! I am hoping a coil has just come loose or not clipped on properly. Check out my optimism lolZforbes said:mcbutler said:Got a carly notification of misfire on cylinder 6 - will be swapping coils around to see if it migrates with the coil.
Rule out the cheapest options and work your way back
Whilst you're in there you may as well do the plug as well
Nope only what you get on a cold day but it smells very rich until the cold start sequence finishes - so is the injector leaking excessive fuel or is the ignition failing so the fuel isn’t burned!Pondrew said:Are you getting smoke out of the exhausts when it's doing the tractor impression, Mark?
mcbutler said:The annoying thing is that all the coils are brand new Bosch and so are the plugs. All done around 300 miles ago! I am hoping a coil has just come loose or not clipped on properly. Check out my optimism lolZforbes said:mcbutler said:Got a carly notification of misfire on cylinder 6 - will be swapping coils around to see if it migrates with the coil.
Rule out the cheapest options and work your way back
Whilst you're in there you may as well do the plug as well
Fair point - I am going to remove the cover and check plug and coil today, I am hoping that maybe I didnt push the coil on hard enough. Failing that I will swap number 6 coil/plug with number 1 and see what happens.Zforbes said:mcbutler said:The annoying thing is that all the coils are brand new Bosch and so are the plugs. All done around 300 miles ago! I am hoping a coil has just come loose or not clipped on properly. Check out my optimism lolZforbes said:Rule out the cheapest options and work your way back
Whilst you're in there you may as well do the plug as well
Fingers crossed, 300 miles isn't proof enough to me they are reliable and the only reason I questioned plugs and coils before the injectors. Single cylinder misfire should rule out other potentials like airflow meter, lambda sensor or air / vac leaks![]()
If it's starting bad after a night parked up then that would imply if it's the injector that the plug is still wet in the morning.mcbutler said:Might start it for a moment before I do that, leave it 5 min and see if I have a wet plug in number 6
Top tip - will do that and post result.enuff_zed said:If it's starting bad after a night parked up then that would imply if it's the injector that the plug is still wet in the morning.mcbutler said:Might start it for a moment before I do that, leave it 5 min and see if I have a wet plug in number 6
No real need to start it up first. Whip the plug out straight away and see if it's wet.
If it is, dry it off (a lighter works!) and put it back in. Then start up and see what happens.
Well that's buggered up my simplistic solution :rofl:R.E92 said:If diagnosing a leaking injector you need to understand that the injectors typically only leak when fuel pressure is present.
Upon unlocking the car the electronic in-tank fuel pump will pressurise the fuel rail to 72.5PSI. When the engine starts running the high pressure fuel pump will begin to turn and the DME will then modulate the rail pressure.
If you haven't disabled cold start in the engine tune then the DME will ask the high pressure pump to pressurise the rail at 2000PSI for the first 45 seconds of operation and the it will step down back to 700PSI for normal operation. In normal driving the rail pressure will be around 700PSI but once you start loading the engine up it will run around 1500-2000PSI again.
Injectors won't continuously leak as the line pressure falls after you turn the car off. They might not leak at 72.5PSI or only slightly but at 2000PSI they could be leaking like a fountain.
You can verify all this by looking at live engine data with MHD. If you unlock the car and see the fuel pressure reading 72PSI but it quickly drops down then you know there's a leak. If it stays high you are fine at low pressure. If the fuel pressure on startup is violently oscillating the the pump could be weak. If the pressure stays high then the pump is OK and you then need to consider the lambda readings on each bank. If 1 bank is reading a crazy rich value like 10:1 then you know that bank has a leaking injector.
Progress then at leastmcbutler said:Progress report
So this morning with the car cold I removed plug and coils from 6 - the misfiring cylinder the plug looked dry but stank of fuel and was very dirty for only 300 miles. However saying that I let the car sit on Rickover yesterday for a hour while I was working on the interior.
I then removed plug and coil from number 1, plug smelt ok, dark but not as bad as 1 and a clean spot on one side, presume this is where the injector spray hits it.
I swapped plugs and coils around and the misfire was still present but a lot less noisy etc than before.
I have photos I will add later for you all to see.
Looks like scarlet might get a new set of index 12 - thanks Warranty Direct - fingers crossed.
I bought MHD during the recent sale, will have a go at this either later today or tomorrow.R.E92 said:If diagnosing a leaking injector you need to understand that the injectors typically only leak when fuel pressure is present.
Upon unlocking the car the electronic in-tank fuel pump will pressurise the fuel rail to 72.5PSI. When the engine starts running the high pressure fuel pump will begin to turn and the DME will then modulate the rail pressure.
If you haven't disabled cold start in the engine tune then the DME will ask the high pressure pump to pressurise the rail at 2000PSI for the first 45 seconds of operation and the it will step down back to 700PSI for normal operation. In normal driving the rail pressure will be around 700PSI but once you start loading the engine up it will run around 1500-2000PSI again.
Injectors won't continuously leak as the line pressure falls after you turn the car off. They might not leak at 72.5PSI or only slightly but at 2000PSI they could be leaking like a fountain.
You can verify all this by looking at live engine data with MHD. If you unlock the car and see the fuel pressure reading 72PSI but it quickly drops down then you know there's a leak. If it stays high you are fine at low pressure. If the fuel pressure on startup is violently oscillating the the pump could be weak. If the pressure stays high then the pump is OK and you then need to consider the lambda readings on each bank. If 1 bank is reading a crazy rich value like 10:1 then you know that bank has a leaking injector.
mcbutler said:I bought MHD during the recent sale, will have a go at this either later today or tomorrow.R.E92 said:If diagnosing a leaking injector you need to understand that the injectors typically only leak when fuel pressure is present.
Upon unlocking the car the electronic in-tank fuel pump will pressurise the fuel rail to 72.5PSI. When the engine starts running the high pressure fuel pump will begin to turn and the DME will then modulate the rail pressure.
If you haven't disabled cold start in the engine tune then the DME will ask the high pressure pump to pressurise the rail at 2000PSI for the first 45 seconds of operation and the it will step down back to 700PSI for normal operation. In normal driving the rail pressure will be around 700PSI but once you start loading the engine up it will run around 1500-2000PSI again.
Injectors won't continuously leak as the line pressure falls after you turn the car off. They might not leak at 72.5PSI or only slightly but at 2000PSI they could be leaking like a fountain.
You can verify all this by looking at live engine data with MHD. If you unlock the car and see the fuel pressure reading 72PSI but it quickly drops down then you know there's a leak. If it stays high you are fine at low pressure. If the fuel pressure on startup is violently oscillating the the pump could be weak. If the pressure stays high then the pump is OK and you then need to consider the lambda readings on each bank. If 1 bank is reading a crazy rich value like 10:1 then you know that bank has a leaking injector.
Is it easy to understand the set up of live data? I am presuming I just tick a few boxes - tap record and see what i get....