Engine Misfire
Engine Misfire
Engine Misfire
An engine cylinder misfires when it is unable to efficiently burn the air/fuel mixture in the
combustion chamber.
When an engine misfires, you may notice one or more of these symptoms:
* Engine loses power
* Engine is hard to start
* Fuel consumption increases
* Emissions increase
* Engine produces popping sounds
* Intake or exhaust manifold backfires
* Engine vibrates, jerks or stumbles
* Engine stalls
Misfires can be grouped into three categories: fuel, ignition and engine mechanical.
Common causes are an issue with the spark plugs, plug wires, the coils or the fuel-delivery system.
EFI Awareness-06/04/2017
Why Misfires Are Bad
Every engine will experience an occasional misfire. As long as the misfires are fairly random and
spaced far enough apart, it causes no harm. But a frequent or steady misfire will cause a sharp
rise in unburned hydrocarbon (HC) emissions, a noticeable drop in power and a significant
decrease in fuel economy.
HC emissions are a factor in urban smog, but can also be very damaging to the vehicles
catalytic converter. When a cylinder misfires, that cylinders dose of air and fuel passes unburned
into the exhaust. When it reaches the converter, the fuel ignites and is burned up.
This causes the converters operating temperature to shoot up hundreds of degrees. So a bad
misfire can make a converter run really hot. If it gets hot enough, the ceramic or metallic
honeycomb inside the converter may melt, creating a partial or complete exhaust restriction. The
increase in backpressure will kill performance and fuel economy, and also may cause the engine
to overheat.
Or, it may cause the engine to stall by strangling off the flow of exhaust.
If you discover a heat-damaged or plugged converter, the old converter will have to be replaced.
You will also have to diagnose and fix the problem that caused the misfire that lead to the
converter failure, too.
Misfires due to Fuel: fuel mixture problems (too rich or too lean, or not enough)
If the cylinders are flooded with too much fuel, it can foul the spark plugs and prevent them from firing.
This was often a problem with misadjusted chokes on carburettors, or bad floats or leaky fuel bowl inlet
valves.
With electronic fuel injection, its much harder to flood an engine (though not impossible). Even so, a rich
mixture can be caused by restrictions in the air intake system, too much fuel pressure (check for a
blockage in the fuel return line from the fuel pressure regulator), or leaky fuel injectors.
A bad coolant sensor that prevents the engine control system from going into closed loop can also make
the fuel mixture run rich, and possibly rich enough to foul out the spark plugs.
A much more common cause of fuel-related misfires on fuel injected engines is too much air and not
enough fuel (lean misfire). The OBD II system may or may not detect the fault and set a lean code (P0171
and/or P0174) in addition to misfire codes.
Misfires due to ignition:
Any fault that prevents the spark from jumping the electrode gap on a spark plug will result in a misfire.
This includes low primary voltage to the ignition system, low output voltage from the ignition coil,
excessive resistance, shorts or opens in the spark plug cables (if the ignition system has wires), excessive
resistance, shorts or opens in the spark plug itself (such as a cracked insulator), a fouled spark plug, or a
spark plug with worn or damaged electrodes.
Spark plugs also can be fouled by coolant leaking into a cylinder, or short-trip driving if the plugs never get
hot enough to burn off fouling deposits.
Misfires due to Engine Mechanical:
Compression misfires will occur if a cylinder fails to hold compression because of a leaky
head gasket, bent valve, burned exhaust valve or broken valve spring.
Low compression also can cause misfires if a cam lobe has rounded off.
These types of problems also can be found with a vacuum gauge. A flickering vacuum
reading typically indicates a cylinder with a compression problem. You can follow up with a
power balance test, a compression test and/or a leak down test to further isolate the fault.
.
OBD II logic to detect Engine Misfire
With OBD II, theres no missing misfires.
OBD II Logic monitor the speed of the crankshaft between cylinder firings to detect misfires.
The powertrain control module (PCM) notes the relative position of the crankshaft via the crankshaft
position sensor (CKP) each time a trigger pulse is sent to the ignition system. If the crankshaft does
not rotate a certain number of degrees between cylinder firings, the change in rotational velocity
indicates a misfire must have occurred.
Any misfires that are detected are recorded and tracked over time. If the rate of misfires exceeds a
certain threshold, the OBD II logic is programmed to log it as a potential emissions failure and set a
misfire fault code. The check engine light(MIL) comes on and a P030X is set where X corresponds to
the cylinder that is misfiring.