craigwatanabe
Member
Okay I never got a response in another thread so I'm reposting my dillema here:
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Hi I'm new to this forum and have been addressing this problem with my 2000 MPV Minivan with the 3.5L V6.
I went to Checkers and they plugged in their scanner. I can't remember the code but they indicated cylinder 4 wasn't firing. Incidently there was a clicking sound coming from the area around the coil pack. The misfire occurs at all RPM's with an occasional backfire when accelerating from a stop. I'm concerned the backfiring will take out my Catalytic converter's elements so I haven't been driving this car unless I have to.
Suspecting an ignition problem I removed the number 4 spark plug wire and got spark. There was no difference in the engine sound (same misfire sound) so I suspected a bad spark plug. Ironically when I removed the spark plug wire (plug side or coil pack side) the clicking sound went away, coming back when I reconnected the plug wire.
I went ahead and replaced the plugs, wire set and coil pack with no change.
Fuel mileage wise I went from just around 300-miles per tank to less than 150-miles per tank running 89-octane gas when the misfiring happened.
I considered the O2-sensor but figured if that was bad the engine would cold idle okay and get worse as the engine heated up (I'm in Hawaii so no severe winters, never dropping below 67-degrees).
I'm thinking possibly the fuel injector for that cylinder but then the fuel economy wouldn't go down drastically over one injector not opening right?
I'm at a loss right now but somehow cylinder-4 seems to be involved as it's the only cylinder that has no difference in engine sound when I remove any of the spark plug wires.
When I checked the engine bay at night under total darkness, I was seeing spark tracings running along the #4,5 and 6 plug wires. I replaced all the wires when I saw this. A new set of wires resolved that issue but didn't cure the misfiring. I checked the secondary ground strap that bolts onto the coil pack and was getting continuity from the bolted strap to the engine to the firewall so I'm getting good grounding. The RF filter that bolts onto the other side of the coil pack also is okay and properly connected.
At this point I'm stumped and cannot figure out what's going on. Please anyone, is there something I'm missing or can correct? I'm not that mechanically inclined to test or remove the fuel injectors.
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Hi I'm new to this forum and have been addressing this problem with my 2000 MPV Minivan with the 3.5L V6.
I went to Checkers and they plugged in their scanner. I can't remember the code but they indicated cylinder 4 wasn't firing. Incidently there was a clicking sound coming from the area around the coil pack. The misfire occurs at all RPM's with an occasional backfire when accelerating from a stop. I'm concerned the backfiring will take out my Catalytic converter's elements so I haven't been driving this car unless I have to.
Suspecting an ignition problem I removed the number 4 spark plug wire and got spark. There was no difference in the engine sound (same misfire sound) so I suspected a bad spark plug. Ironically when I removed the spark plug wire (plug side or coil pack side) the clicking sound went away, coming back when I reconnected the plug wire.
I went ahead and replaced the plugs, wire set and coil pack with no change.
Fuel mileage wise I went from just around 300-miles per tank to less than 150-miles per tank running 89-octane gas when the misfiring happened.
I considered the O2-sensor but figured if that was bad the engine would cold idle okay and get worse as the engine heated up (I'm in Hawaii so no severe winters, never dropping below 67-degrees).
I'm thinking possibly the fuel injector for that cylinder but then the fuel economy wouldn't go down drastically over one injector not opening right?
I'm at a loss right now but somehow cylinder-4 seems to be involved as it's the only cylinder that has no difference in engine sound when I remove any of the spark plug wires.
When I checked the engine bay at night under total darkness, I was seeing spark tracings running along the #4,5 and 6 plug wires. I replaced all the wires when I saw this. A new set of wires resolved that issue but didn't cure the misfiring. I checked the secondary ground strap that bolts onto the coil pack and was getting continuity from the bolted strap to the engine to the firewall so I'm getting good grounding. The RF filter that bolts onto the other side of the coil pack also is okay and properly connected.
At this point I'm stumped and cannot figure out what's going on. Please anyone, is there something I'm missing or can correct? I'm not that mechanically inclined to test or remove the fuel injectors.