What would cause a misfire in cylinder 4?
P0304 indicates that cylinder number 4 is experiencing misfires. A misfire occurs when an insufficient amount of fuel is burning in a cylinder. A misfire from one or more cylinders can be caused by many reasons from a faulty ignition system, fuel system, or internal engine failure.
What can cause one cylinder to misfire?
Lean misfire causes that only affect one cylinder include a dirty fuel injector, an open or shorted fuel injector, or a problem in the fuel injector driver circuit (wiring or PCM). Compression problems that may cause a misfire include a burned exhaust valve, bent intake or exhaust valve, or leaky head gasket.
What causes a misfire on a coil on plug?
When the engine cools off overnight, the fuel in the rail cools and condenses, leaving a small pocket of vapor at the highest point in the rail, right next to injector No. 1. Naturally the misfire clears up quickly as the rail fills with fuel, and there’s no reason to chase this problem any further (how could you possibly fix it?).
What to do if you have a spark plug misfire?
I suggest first removing and checking the spark plug and swap in a new one or swap with cylinder next to it. This way the misfire moves to other cylinder then you know it was plug and replace it. If misfire still on number one then check for spark and injector pulse and replace injector or coil as needed.
What is the code for a failed coil?
Neither code is a slam dunk diagnosis for a failed coil. Instead of throwing a set of anything, let’s concentrate on cylinder #5. SWAP positions of 2 coils.
What does it mean when multiple cylinders misfire?
That means that multiple cylinders misfire at random. The codes P0300 to P0308 are called misfire codes . A misfiring engine shakes, runs rough (unevenly) and lacks power. Shaking is more noticeable at idle or during acceleration. The “Check Engine” light on the dash may blink repeatedly or stay on solid.