Misfiring like a good un......
Misfiring like a good un......
Author
Discussion

Chris49

Original Poster:

1,121 posts

224 months

Monday 16th March 2009
quotequote all
Hi all,

Can some one give me a quick checklist for checking and resolving a misfire?

Happens all through the rev range and at all speeds.....

Any help would be great.

Thanks as always guys.

matc

4,735 posts

230 months

Monday 16th March 2009
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I had this on my old car when I 1st got it, turned out to be a coil.

robox72

35 posts

204 months

Monday 16th March 2009
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Loose wire on Air Flow Mass sensor ??? Happened to me on my '05 Exige

delS1

499 posts

263 months

Monday 16th March 2009
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Mine was doing this (it sounded good actually) until a massive misfire then it wouldn’t start. Turned out to be a loose rotor arm and a very dirty corroded distributor.

delS1

Lichtgestalt

67 posts

223 months

Tuesday 17th March 2009
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Had the same and for it was moisture at the coils and spark plugs (with a bit of corrosion)

fergus

6,430 posts

298 months

Tuesday 17th March 2009
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also check that the crank signal isn't too close to an HT lead as this can cause enough interference to effect when the coil packs are firing...

Gad-Westy

16,195 posts

236 months

Tuesday 17th March 2009
quotequote all
Has it been out in the rain or washed recently?

Chris49

Original Poster:

1,121 posts

224 months

Tuesday 17th March 2009
quotequote all
Gad-Westy said:
Has it been out in the rain or washed recently?
That was my first thought but she's been kept bone dry for a good week or so now.

Gad-Westy

16,195 posts

236 months

Tuesday 17th March 2009
quotequote all
Chris49 said:
Gad-Westy said:
Has it been out in the rain or washed recently?
That was my first thought but she's been kept bone dry for a good week or so now.
In that case, unless there is anything obvious, the first thing you ought to do is get the plugs out and have a look. If you find that one looks different to the others that narrows down the problem nicely. If they all look the same take a picture of them so we can have a look at the colour as it can tell you a lot.

MadProf

152 posts

225 months

Wednesday 18th March 2009
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Yes,I'd agree,check you're plugs first,then HT leads are ok and connected properly.It's that old process of illimination game.

wetny

486 posts

235 months

Wednesday 18th March 2009
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Mine had a good bit of moisture down the plug well. Usually plugs, leads, dis cap roter arm. Remeber not to over tighten the plugs if you get them out. Threads are soft.

Chris49

Original Poster:

1,121 posts

224 months

Thursday 19th March 2009
quotequote all
If I get the car over to a stealer will they be able to use some plug in wizardry to diagnose the problem?

Could save me a day of poking around!

Gad-Westy

16,195 posts

236 months

Thursday 19th March 2009
quotequote all
Chris49 said:
If I get the car over to a stealer will they be able to use some plug in wizardry to diagnose the problem?

Could save me a day of poking around!
It'll depend what the problem is. The S1 diagnostic (does the standard car even have it, I know the 111s does) is fairly primitive. It'll probably tell you if a sensor has failed but maybe not tell you much about the state of the ignition system. Whip the plugs out and we'll try and give you an online diagnosis.

mrssumner

186 posts

217 months

Thursday 19th March 2009
quotequote all
Gad-Westy said:
Chris49 said:
If I get the car over to a stealer will they be able to use some plug in wizardry to diagnose the problem?

Could save me a day of poking around!
It'll depend what the problem is. The S1 diagnostic (does the standard car even have it, I know the 111s does) is fairly primitive. It'll probably tell you if a sensor has failed but maybe not tell you much about the state of the ignition system. Whip the plugs out and we'll try and give you an online diagnosis.
The standard S1 111 does have a diagnostic facility ("Lotus Check" scanner tool), but it has two less functions than the 111S (just reading the service manual... I am sad...)

For a standard car it does:
PRE-TEST - check whether any faults have been detected since last pre-test
TEST - runs test sequence for various engine management components
LIVE DATA - enables current readings from various sensors to be displayed

RobM77

35,349 posts

257 months

Thursday 19th March 2009
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My cambelt slipped last month... it just sounded like a hammer drill through the rev range. No damage done thankfully.

Gooby

9,269 posts

257 months

Saturday 21st March 2009
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Isolate if it is ignition or fueling problems. This can be done in a basic way by smelling he zorst. If it smells of unburnt fuel then "probably" there is fuel being delivered. Run through the ingition circuit. Plugs, leads, coil and dizzy (both cap and rotor arm). If there is no resolution then try the temp sensors. (2 on a K series).

Chris49

Original Poster:

1,121 posts

224 months

Monday 30th March 2009
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One of the plugs was standing in about 1/2 an inch of water!!!

A dry and new plugs and shes all better!

RobM77

35,349 posts

257 months

Monday 30th March 2009
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Chris49 said:
One of the plugs was standing in about 1/2 an inch of water!!! A dry and new plugs and shes all better!
ah... :-) that's a common k series problem. One of my friends sealed his plug cover on top of the engine with mastik to avoid that happening.

Mr_C

2,497 posts

252 months

Monday 30th March 2009
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RobM77 said:
Chris49 said:
One of the plugs was standing in about 1/2 an inch of water!!! A dry and new plugs and shes all better!
ah... :-) that's a common k series problem. One of my friends sealed his plug cover on top of the engine with mastik to avoid that happening.
they can get a bit of condensation down the holes if you seal it too well though...