Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

well during this hot weather an intermittent missfire has shown its head. Its not just an on boost thing, when its missing its idle and on throttle and all except it sounds normal only on deceleration. power is down offcourse when its on sounds like a wrx well and truly

thing is car will be fine after start then driving well with full power, then get stuck in traffic for 5-10 mins and its gone into complete missing mode - so basically it is on off and seems to be when very hot

now i know most common to look for this kinda thing is spark plugs and coils, i replaced spark plugs a few days ago (bcpr6es) i think 1mm gap but b4 it was doing it with the stock plugs which seemed like a bigger gap like 1.1 or 1.2

any ideas guys?? can the coils or any other item fail when really hot??

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/97757-rb20det-hot-missfire/
Share on other sites

Maybe your water temp sensor - the one that controls the flow of coolant to the injectors(I think thats what it does) - maybe that is playing havoc... pretty sure its the one on the left(If your looking from the front of the car), of the two sensors on the water tube running from the top of the radiator.

coil or ignitor more then likely.

one guy was saying the other day, if you want to narrow it down if you think its the ignitor, get a heat gun onto it and see if you can replicate the problem..

as for the coils, remove the cover, at night when its dark and see if you can see the spark jumping out of the coils. (also inspect for hairline cracks)

Interested to hear some results as I sometimes get this too. Usually after a really good heat soak it misfires a bit ( only at idle ).

Also, after shutting down for 5 mins or so and then re-starting it hunts till I start driving again then it settles.

BTW I'm running 0.8mm gapped PFR6A11's and have Splitfire Coilpacks and I'm "guessing" they're not the problem.

RB20DET plugs that plug into the coil packs are getting very brittle at this age, another possiblilty is simply unplugging and replugging in all the connectors on all 6 coils. It's free to try and i've had a few doing this very symptom.

If your getting misfiring at idle and also under partial load (non boost) when the engine has warmed up (or even before), try replacing your throttle position sensor. I had the problem your describing. If you stay in second and slowly let it wind out to 5rpm, u could feel it misfire every now and then. It made it a b*tch to drive in stop start traffic, since ur keeping it very near the clutch catch point a lot.. it would every now and then just misfire and kill the engine cos it suddenly lost enough power to keep the engine running (we're talking really crawling traffic here though). Anyway, cost me 110 delivered from justjap and now I only have the misfire on boost at very high revs (Splitfire time!)

ok cheers for input peoples,

while it was missing like crazy on idle i unplugged each coil one at a time and no.3 made bugger all difference so hereth the problem i guess

so that means its either the no3 coil or the coil plug itself hey??

considering that it starts doing it only when hot after about 15mins of driving and i think once i went over a harsh bump and the miss kicked in

Update time. Replaced Ignition Control Module, no joy. Replaced TPS ( complete Throttle Body w/TPS fitted ) and it's slightly better but not fixed. Going to try cleaning AFM next and if that doesn't work I'll check the coils ( 3-4 year old Splitfire's ).

  • 2 weeks later...

Hey B,

Here's where I'm at now. On a hot day ( around 30 + degrees ) at idle I'm still getting a faint and intermittent popping at the exhaust and idle fluctuation of around 50rpm ( misfire ). Other than that it's fine.

So far I've replaced Spark Plugs ( with new BCPR6ES ), Crank Angle sensor ( 2nd hand ), AAC Valve ( 2nd hand ) Ignition Control Module ( 2nd hand ), Throttle Body with TPS ( 2nd hand ) and checked Splitfire Coil Packs ( coils seem fine ).

So..... I'm going to install a brand new OEM O2 sensor ( picking up today ) and see how that goes and if no joy, I'm thinking it might be an issue with the ECU tune ( chipped stock ECU ) and will pop it on the dyno see what shows.

I will say one thing though..... Now that I've replaced all those parts with cleaned and really good condition 2nd hand parts ( lot of hunting around !! ), the car goes like a rocket :rofl:

Sensor went in a little while ago and the engine idles quite a bit better but still has some faint signs of popping out the exhaust which I'm convinced can be tuned out ( car's overdue for some TLC on the dyno ).

I pulled the old O2 sensor out ( about 4 years old ) only to find it had the following stamped on it: FORD :P Can't even remember what place fitted it but the meat pie part is out and the sushi part is now in :)

I get the same thing happening to me if I'm stuck idleing for more then a few minutes on a very hot day. (35+)

Normally goes away after moving for a minute or so though, once some air starts to circulate through the engine bay.

I've recently raised the rear of my bonnet to try and reduce the engine bay temperatures, but haven't had a hot day since doing it, so can't give you any findings.

Can definately see some 'heat haze' coming out near my windscreen now, so obviously some of the heat is escaping.

  • 1 year later...

G'day,

I'm only new to this forum and it may sound like a stupid idea, but has anyone cosidered the possibility of vapour lock....Ie as all components underneath the bonnet get heat soaked the fuel lines have the same issue and the fuel is begining to vapourise prior to entering the into the cylinder. This generally causes the engine to miss under the conditions that people have described, as i have had similar symptoms in my car (s13 with RB20).

I would be interested to hear peoples opinions on this theory and what the issue was if you have fixed it ?

Cheers

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Yeah well per the video it took 15s for the stock unit to start up....even if I give it a few seconds discount for starting that is at least 12 sec before you get a reverse camera if you are trying to leave a park.  The android unit is way faster, but 2016 for the stock unit is a long time ago in consumer electronics
    • Yea that’s why I said ima test them with multimeter and see the reads.
    • Only at idle. Isn’t a problem when rev it seems.
    • @Haggerty This seems silly to ask, but are you confident in your ability to tune the Haltech?  
    • Next on the to-do list was an oil and filter change. Nothing exciting to add here except the oil filter is in a really stupid place (facing the engine mount/subframe/steering rack). GReddy do a relocation kit which puts it towards the gearbox, I would have preferred towards the front but there's obviously a lot more stuff there. Something I'll have to look at for the next service perhaps. First time using Valvoline oil, although I can't see it being any different to most other brands Nice... The oil filter location... At least the subframe wont rust any time soon I picked up a genuine fuel filter, this is part of the fuel pump assembly inside the fuel tank. Access can be found underneath the rear seat, you'll see this triangular cover Remove the 3x plastic 10mm nuts and lift the cover up, pushing the rubber grommet through The yellow fuel line clips push out in opposite directions, remove these completely. The two moulded fuel lines can now pull upwards to disconnect, along with the wire electrical plug. There's 8x 8mm bolts that secure the black retaining ring. The fuel pump assembly is now ready to lift out. Be mindful of the fuel hose on the side, the hose clamp on mine was catching the hose preventing it from lifting up The fuel pump/filter has an upper and lower section held on by 4 pressure clips. These did take a little bit of force, it sounded like the plastic tabs were going to break but they didn't (don't worry!) The lower section helps mount the fuel pump, there's a circular rubber gasket/grommet/seal thing on the bottom where the sock is. Undo the hose clip on the short fuel hose on the side to disconnect it from the 3 way distribution pipe to be able to lift the upper half away. Don't forget to unplug the fuel pump too! There's a few rubber O rings that will need transferring to the new filter housing, I show these in the video at the bottom of this write up. Reassembly is the reverse Here's a photo of the new filter installed, you'll be able to see where the tabs are more clearing against the yellow OEM plastic Once the assembly is re-installed, I turned the engine over a few times to help build up fuel pressure. I did panic when the car stopped turning over but I could hear the fuel pump making a noise. It eventually started and has been fine since. Found my 'lucky' coin underneath the rear seat too The Youtube video can be seen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uLJ65pmQt44&t=6s
×
×
  • Create New...