Uncle Buck
09-25-2014, 06:01 PM
I read an interesting thread on the DOB forum and thought I'd share it.
One of the members was having a heck of a time debugging his 08 GT. Would run great for a while then through misfire codes, fall on its face and then self correct and run fine. The misfire codes were moving from one cylinder to the next and there was almost no consistency except codes tended to show up mostly on deceleration. He tried all kinds of remedies. Plugs, coil packs, an alternator, tune, retune all kinds of data logging including a couple of sessions hooked up to a Ford dealer diagnostic computer. According to all the logs, the car ran like a champ, but it didn't.
Poor guy was at his wits end trying to chase this misfire.
In the end it turns out it's related to the balancer. He had taken it off and reinstalled without using a new bolt and without following a specific torquing technique that includes rotation and multi steps to spec torque. Must have not been seated perfectly causing the crank position sensor to get confused under just the right condition. A new bolt and proper tightening sequence has resolved his problem after 2 months of chasing it.
Thought some good tech might brighten your day.
One of the members was having a heck of a time debugging his 08 GT. Would run great for a while then through misfire codes, fall on its face and then self correct and run fine. The misfire codes were moving from one cylinder to the next and there was almost no consistency except codes tended to show up mostly on deceleration. He tried all kinds of remedies. Plugs, coil packs, an alternator, tune, retune all kinds of data logging including a couple of sessions hooked up to a Ford dealer diagnostic computer. According to all the logs, the car ran like a champ, but it didn't.
Poor guy was at his wits end trying to chase this misfire.
In the end it turns out it's related to the balancer. He had taken it off and reinstalled without using a new bolt and without following a specific torquing technique that includes rotation and multi steps to spec torque. Must have not been seated perfectly causing the crank position sensor to get confused under just the right condition. A new bolt and proper tightening sequence has resolved his problem after 2 months of chasing it.
Thought some good tech might brighten your day.