Flapjack
Lunatic engine swapper
Rough Running - NOT something simple...
I'm posting here because my engine is closer to the 4.6L 3v than the GT500 engine...
I've been driving the Mustang pretty much daily now for the past few months. I've had no problems, other than the minor E85 tuning issues, which I've long since resolved.
I was driving the car home today after taking the kids out to eat when it inexplicably shut off. The CEL and battery lights were on (no code, just indicating the engine was off), so I put it back in gear and let the tranny start the car back up (was coasting downhill in neutral when it happened).
The first thing I noticed was how low vacuum was even in gear decelerating. It was -10. Normally, vacuum on decel is a reliable, set you watch by it, -18. When I got to the stop light, and put it in neutral, the engine was running really rough... loping and AFRs were in the 17s. Vacuum was a piddly -2. I quickly plugged in the tuner while the light was red, but there were no codes.
Luckily, I was less than a mile from home. As long as I kept the gas up, the car ran ok enough. Without gas pedal, the power brakes weren't working (incredible brake pressure to keep the car from driving into the garage door.
I let the car cool down for 10 minutes and checked the codes again. Nothing. I started it back up and let it idle.... same -2. It would rev fine if I gave it gas, but otherwise ran like shit.
The first thing I did was check all the connectors. At one point, I had a spark plug coil harness pop off, but the car ran rich, not lean, because of it. They were all on tight. Next, I checked each and every vacuum hose to see if one had popped off. They were all in place. I even checked inside the cab near the fuse box where I have my boost/vacuum gauge sender installed. That was fine too (I did not check the hole in the firewall behind the wheel guard and battery, but I did pull the hose both ways to make sure it was still connected. It was, and moved back and forth without issue.
Finally, I checked the temperature using an infrared heat gun with laser site. 2 out of 4 headers on each side of the engine (no pattern) were around 250-275F while the other two were around 400-450F. Again, no real pattern. Here are the temp numbers for the cylinders:
1: 265F
2: 400F
3: 275F
4: 260F
5: 400F
6: 400F
7: 265F
8: 255F
The firing order for this engine is: 1, 3, 7, 2, 6, 5, 4, 8. I don't see any pattern, as there shouldn't be, as each cylinder has it's own coil-on-plug.
So basically, 5 out of 8 cylinders aren't firing correctly and I can't figure out why. Even if they weren't, would this affect vacuum so significantly??
Here's a video of the engine running:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n7hpdpjuYjQ (sorry about the wind... it's insane today)
Not sure what the knocking is. I've been told it's normal. VCT is not only disabled in the tune, but also physically locked out with a set of Livernois lockouts.
I'm certain one of the first ideas people would throw out would timing off due to bad tensioners causing the chain to jump a tooth, but I highly doubt that. One, the temperature (due to different AFR due to different compression) should be the same across that entire bank. 2) The tensioners were changed out when I rebuilt the engine.
Again, it's also running lean. AFR at idle is in the 17s (was ~14.6 with fuel trims +/- 5%). AFR at WOT is in the 13s where before it was at 11.5.
I'm out of ideas on this one. When the engine has cooled down completely, I might do a compression test... though I highly doubt 5 out of 8 cylinders detonated. Especially running E85 with no extra timing.
I'm posting here because my engine is closer to the 4.6L 3v than the GT500 engine...
I've been driving the Mustang pretty much daily now for the past few months. I've had no problems, other than the minor E85 tuning issues, which I've long since resolved.
I was driving the car home today after taking the kids out to eat when it inexplicably shut off. The CEL and battery lights were on (no code, just indicating the engine was off), so I put it back in gear and let the tranny start the car back up (was coasting downhill in neutral when it happened).
The first thing I noticed was how low vacuum was even in gear decelerating. It was -10. Normally, vacuum on decel is a reliable, set you watch by it, -18. When I got to the stop light, and put it in neutral, the engine was running really rough... loping and AFRs were in the 17s. Vacuum was a piddly -2. I quickly plugged in the tuner while the light was red, but there were no codes.
Luckily, I was less than a mile from home. As long as I kept the gas up, the car ran ok enough. Without gas pedal, the power brakes weren't working (incredible brake pressure to keep the car from driving into the garage door.
I let the car cool down for 10 minutes and checked the codes again. Nothing. I started it back up and let it idle.... same -2. It would rev fine if I gave it gas, but otherwise ran like shit.
The first thing I did was check all the connectors. At one point, I had a spark plug coil harness pop off, but the car ran rich, not lean, because of it. They were all on tight. Next, I checked each and every vacuum hose to see if one had popped off. They were all in place. I even checked inside the cab near the fuse box where I have my boost/vacuum gauge sender installed. That was fine too (I did not check the hole in the firewall behind the wheel guard and battery, but I did pull the hose both ways to make sure it was still connected. It was, and moved back and forth without issue.
Finally, I checked the temperature using an infrared heat gun with laser site. 2 out of 4 headers on each side of the engine (no pattern) were around 250-275F while the other two were around 400-450F. Again, no real pattern. Here are the temp numbers for the cylinders:
1: 265F
2: 400F
3: 275F
4: 260F
5: 400F
6: 400F
7: 265F
8: 255F
The firing order for this engine is: 1, 3, 7, 2, 6, 5, 4, 8. I don't see any pattern, as there shouldn't be, as each cylinder has it's own coil-on-plug.
So basically, 5 out of 8 cylinders aren't firing correctly and I can't figure out why. Even if they weren't, would this affect vacuum so significantly??
Here's a video of the engine running:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n7hpdpjuYjQ (sorry about the wind... it's insane today)
Not sure what the knocking is. I've been told it's normal. VCT is not only disabled in the tune, but also physically locked out with a set of Livernois lockouts.
I'm certain one of the first ideas people would throw out would timing off due to bad tensioners causing the chain to jump a tooth, but I highly doubt that. One, the temperature (due to different AFR due to different compression) should be the same across that entire bank. 2) The tensioners were changed out when I rebuilt the engine.
Again, it's also running lean. AFR at idle is in the 17s (was ~14.6 with fuel trims +/- 5%). AFR at WOT is in the 13s where before it was at 11.5.
I'm out of ideas on this one. When the engine has cooled down completely, I might do a compression test... though I highly doubt 5 out of 8 cylinders detonated. Especially running E85 with no extra timing.
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It's true, even today.