Help.. MASSIVE MISS

turbogt

Member
May 1, 2003
723
16
19
Montana
About a week ago I would feel a slight miss when I revved the car up and then when it revved down it would miss from 1400-900 rpm.. Well, I went to start the car today and it idles pretty rough, but as soon as I begin to rev it up it misses so bad it makes my teeth chatter... it's the worst between 1000-1500 rpm and gets less noticable but still definately there as I rev it higher.. It smooths mostly out by 5k but is still definately there... I changed all the plugs today and they all looked really good.. I did have a vacuum leak which I also just fixed today so i"m pulling 12-13" at idle, which is about normal at my elevation.. What do you guys think??

No noticable smoke.. This is a vortech car.. Could it be a headgasket.. There's not really any noticeable engine noises besides a tick from the drivers side fenderwell?
 
Do a cylinder balance test to find the missing cylinders. If the test gives different cylinders when you run it repeatedly, suspect an ignition component common to all cylinders like the TFI, ignition coil or PIP. When you dump the codes, the PIP will usually give a code 14 if it is bad.


Cylinder balance test:
Warm the car's engine up to normal operating temperature. Use a
jumper wire or paper clip to put the computer into test mode. Start
the engine and let it go through the normal diagnostic tests, then
quickly press the throttle to the floor. The engine RPM should exceed
2500 RPM's for a brief second. The engine RPM's will increase to about
1450-1600 RPM and hold steady. The engine will shut off power to each
injector, one at a time. When it has sequenced through all 8 injectors,
it will flash 9 for everything OK, or the number of the failing cylinder
such as 2 for cylinder #2. Quickly pressing the throttle again up to
2500 RPM’s will cause the test to re-run with smaller qualifying figures.
Do it a third time, and if the same cylinder shows up, the cylinder is
weak and isn’t putting out power like it should. See the Chilton’s Shop
manual for the complete test procedure

Here's the link to dump the computer codes with only a jumper wire
or paper clip and the check engine light, or test light or voltmeter.
I’ve used it for years, and it works great.

See http://www.troublecodes.net/Ford/

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If your car is an 86-88 stang, you'll have to use the test lamp or voltmeter method. There is no functional check engine light on the 86-88's except possibly the Cali Mass Air cars.

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89 through 95 cars have a working Check Engine light. Watch it instead of using a test lamp.

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Do a compression test on all the cylinders.
Take special note of any cylinder that shows up as weak in the cylinder
balance test. Low compression on one of these cylinders rules out the
injectors as being the most likely cause of the problem. Look at cylinders
that fail the cylinder balance test but have good compression. These
cylinders either have a bad injector, bad spark plug or spark plug wire.
Move the wire and then the spark plug to another cylinder and run the
cylinder balance test again. If it follows the moved wire or spark plug,
you have found the problem. If the same cylinder fails the test again,
the injector is bad. If different cylinders fail the cylinder balance test,
you have ignition problems or wiring problems in the 10 pin black &
white electrical connectors located by the EGR.

How to do a compression test:
Only use a compression tester with a screw in adapter for the spark
plug hole. The other type leaks too much to get an accurate reading.
Your local auto parts store may have a compression tester to rent.
If you do mechanic work on your own car on a regular basis, it would
be a good tool to add to your collection.

With the engine warmed up, remove all spark plugs and prop the
throttle wide open, crank the engine until it the gage reading stops
increasing. On a cold engine, it will be hard to tell what's good &
what's not. Some of the recent posts have numbers ranging from
140-170 psi. If the compression is low, squirt some oil in the cylinder
and do it again – if it comes up, the rings are worn. There should be
no more than 10% difference between cylinders. Use a blow down
leak test (puts compressed air inside cylinders) on cylinders that
have more than 10% difference.

See the link to my site for details on how to build your own blow
down type compression tester.
 
Good writeup.. I changed all plugs and such... Ran it for a few more minutes... She's done... Sounds like a broke a wrist pin... Game over.. Sounds like I'll be building a dart 427 over the winter