Dreaded fault codes
Good day all! I'm hoping someone can point me in the right direction. I did some searching, and I'm a bit confused. We had some heavy rains and flooding the other day, and my wife drove through some high water. After that, the car began stuttering, running what I would call rich, and is in limp? mode (it won't go above 3K RPM). I'm hoping I can work toward a fix on my own, rather than take it to the mechanic, but it may not be that easy, and I don't want to just throw parts at it hoping something will stick. I feel like the driving through the water and the codes are no coincidence. What I don't know is if they have anything in common.
As far as I can tell I'm getting multiple cylinder misfires on cylinders 1, 3, and 5 (codes below) and the other codes are due to the misfires.Is there something that would cause cylinders 1, 3, and 5 to go down at once? Is it really possible that all 3 coils went down at the same time? I can't imagine all 3 plugs fouled at the exact same time, but I guess it's a possibility too. Any ideas? The codes I'm getting are: P0300 P0301 P0303 P0305 P1313 P1316 Thanks! |
of course they are the hard to get at cylinders next to the bulkheas requiring removal of the intake manifold to examine. just throwing out some thoughts for now.... each crank has its own sensor so it could be a bad bank 1 camshaft sensor or connector or the wiring that controls those 3 coils |
how high was water? |
1,3,5 are firewall side cylinders. 1313 is catalyst damage (in other words don't drive it AT ALL until fixed) 1316 is catalyst high emissions.
1313 and 1316 : NOTE: This DTC will flag ONLY when accompanied by an individual cylinder misfire DTC: P0300 – P0306 Driving (I assume fairly quickly) through standing water is dandy, smh. OF COURSE IT'S RELATED. Unfortunately because this is the hardest bank to access, diagnosis is harder. Could be as simple as water still standing in wells (had this on my BMW when dealer steamed the engine bay), could be it fried the coils, could be wiring shorts or fried wiring from water egress. Could be other things as well but start with standing water in firewall side wells. |
https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.jag...758e6ed56d.jpg
pointing to camshaft sensor https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.jag...1b4c379ec8.jpg camshaft sensor on left side of head just below cam cover |
Originally Posted by iownme
(Post 1966005)
of course they are the hard to get at cylinders next to the bulkheas requiring removal of the intake manifold to examine. just throwing out some thoughts for now.... each crank has its own sensor so it could be a bad bank 1 camshaft sensor or connector or the wiring that controls those 3 coils
Originally Posted by iownme
(Post 1966008)
how high was water?
Originally Posted by Dell Gailey
(Post 1966011)
1,3,5 are firewall side cylinders. 1313 is catalyst damage (in other words don't drive it AT ALL until fixed) 1316 is catalyst high emissions.
1313 and 1316 : NOTE: This DTC will flag ONLY when accompanied by an individual cylinder misfire DTC: P0300 – P0306 Driving (I assume fairly quickly) through standing water is dandy, smh. OF COURSE IT'S RELATED. Unfortunately because this is the hardest bank to access, diagnosis is harder. Could be as simple as water still standing in wells (had this on my BMW when dealer steamed the engine bay), could be it fried the coils, could be wiring shorts or fried wiring from water egress. Could be other things as well but start with standing water in firewall side wells. I'll definitely look for standing water in the wells in short order! That's a relatively easy one to start with. I will report back. Thanks, guys! |
bear in mind that womens knowledge of inches varies greatly, especially when its cold |
i imagine the sensors are the same so you could try swapping them over |
the spark plug wells are not easy to access at all. in an ideal world, the rubber "seals" on the coils would stop water from entering the well, but the aluminum rim of the well rots with age and does not always make any kind of a seal, so to check the wells requires removal of the intake manifold and the 3 coils. get back if you need help wih that https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.jag...54685dc1f9.png deteriated spark plug well rim |
Thanks! I'll get back after I swap the cam sensor and test. I want nothing to do with taking off the intake. I was under the impression I'd see water sitting on it and could blow it out. I'm new :-D
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Front yeah, but not rear unfortunately. Curse of the transverse engine.
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Because of the transverse engine, you'll see descriptions of left and right for the part(s). To us it's really front and rear. Both are the same part number.
Jaguar X Type Camshaft Position Sensors |
the rear bank next to the firewall/bulkhead is bank 1 and houses cylinders 1 (left) 3 (center) 5 (right) the bank closest to you when in front of the engine is bank 2 and houses cylinders 2 (left) 4 (center) 6 (right) although you cant easily get to the plug wells... there is a 1" or so depression along the bank where the coil heads sit. from the left side of intake you can likely see in there or perhaps feel...you will be able to see the head of coil cyl #1... so just feel around there to see if theres any standing water |
in case you need to remove the intake at all....its not hard and does mot take long or involve much |
Thanks, guys! I plan on getting back on this after work today, so I'll revert back once I do some more troubleshooting. I really do appreciate it!
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Current update:
Swapping the cam position sensors had no effect, the same cylinders are reflecting misfires. The wiring does not appear to be brittle or damaged. The coils and boots I can see look to be in good serviceable condition. Is there any way to validate that the coils did indeed short out or something else and are bad, short of pulling the intake? As you can see, I'm concerned about pulling the intake :-) Thanks again! |
Of course ours are not out in the easy to access open. Check the easy access front ones (that you show no codes as misfiring) to get a baseline. This next video is terrible camera work and explanation but, if coils tested this way show they fire, then the fault would be wiring or ECM signal = |
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