Engine Fault and Deciphering P-codes
#21
Thought I'd close this one.
Unfortunately, I've got no pics of my gasket install exercise - was too cold to be messing around much.
The intake boot and cast snorkel are definitely the most difficult part of this task.
The gasket replacement was straight forward, pay attention to were the little rectangular pads are on the gasket so you achieve the proper starting point for the install of the "racetrack" gasket around the cover itself.
I also ended up replacing the #3 coil. I replaced the gasket, and the car was still running rough. Cleared all codes with my OBDII scanner (jag was in the list of cars!!?!?), ran it until new code (~5 miles), scanned again verifying misfire on #3. Cleared codes. Swapped #3 with #1. Ran until code again. Misfire moved with coil to #1. Bad coil.
One note on the coils. While easy to replace, I had to order the part from any of the local auto parts guys. In doing so, I found out that the price of the coil varied from $53 to $100. I tried Pep Boys, Autozone, O'Rielly's, and Advanced Auto (I do not have a NAPA nearby). The coil my '03 S type R was of the 4 blade terminal type. I purchased from Advanced for $53.
With new coil, and new gaskets....car runs well and no yellow lights on the dash, woot!! Knock on wood.....
Brutal, I also followed the accelarator sequence outlined above. Is there anyway to verify such was beneficial - other than the obvious that the car seems to be running with little to no issue, throttle control included?
Kind Regards
Unfortunately, I've got no pics of my gasket install exercise - was too cold to be messing around much.
The intake boot and cast snorkel are definitely the most difficult part of this task.
The gasket replacement was straight forward, pay attention to were the little rectangular pads are on the gasket so you achieve the proper starting point for the install of the "racetrack" gasket around the cover itself.
I also ended up replacing the #3 coil. I replaced the gasket, and the car was still running rough. Cleared all codes with my OBDII scanner (jag was in the list of cars!!?!?), ran it until new code (~5 miles), scanned again verifying misfire on #3. Cleared codes. Swapped #3 with #1. Ran until code again. Misfire moved with coil to #1. Bad coil.
One note on the coils. While easy to replace, I had to order the part from any of the local auto parts guys. In doing so, I found out that the price of the coil varied from $53 to $100. I tried Pep Boys, Autozone, O'Rielly's, and Advanced Auto (I do not have a NAPA nearby). The coil my '03 S type R was of the 4 blade terminal type. I purchased from Advanced for $53.
With new coil, and new gaskets....car runs well and no yellow lights on the dash, woot!! Knock on wood.....
Brutal, I also followed the accelarator sequence outlined above. Is there anyway to verify such was beneficial - other than the obvious that the car seems to be running with little to no issue, throttle control included?
Kind Regards
#22
#23
. just found your site . i have a 1999 stype 3 litre which has a bad misfire . no engine light showing . ive replaced the coils and plugs probably 5 years ago . it did have an engine light on then and replacing the coils cured the fault. my question is if a coil pack if breaking down do you always get an engine light on ...regards Bleunose england
#24
#25
#26
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Damon /Houston, Texas
Posts: 7,254
Received 2,183 Likes
on
1,355 Posts
. just found your site . i have a 1999 stype 3 litre which has a bad misfire . no engine light showing . ive replaced the coils and plugs probably 5 years ago . it did have an engine light on then and replacing the coils cured the fault. my question is if a coil pack if breaking down do you always get an engine light on ...regards Bleunose england
The following users liked this post:
bleunose (01-22-2012)
#27
thanks for the reply. i work in engineering as a manager overlooking 2 factories. we produce fuel systems for the aircraft industry. my role is looking after all the machine tools . i am a great believer when fault finding in getting to root causes of faults and then putting in fixes if possible so it doesnt happen again. ive had a couple of issues with the engine before so i will investige getting the correct tools to diagnose the fault before i change to many things . its difficult i know to nail faults unless you have some experiance on that fault before
#28
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)