2008 tahoe K1500. Throwing P0300(random misfire) and P0174 (lean bank 2).

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

j91z28d1

Full Access Member
Joined
Feb 28, 2022
Posts
3,223
Reaction score
4,005
I wouldn't think a tune should be effected by doing a reset thats built in.

thats complete crap that he reset your truck, it started running horribly and then just sent you on your way like good luck.

what kinda shop treats people like that? man what they away with these days.

as said, I think I'd put the Tb back on and change plugs. that you have 2 o2's in the same side only is really weird, and definitely could be messing up the codes, like it thinks it's lean on the right side but the right side o2 is on the left side of the engine right next to the left side o2. do you have any kinda scanner at all? to look at fuel trims and do some basic diagnostics?

since it's modded, and seems oddly modded. you might just have to find a good tuner shop that can tune these trucks and have them diagnose whats been done in with it.
 
OP
OP
User_Name

User_Name

Member
Joined
Feb 14, 2023
Posts
33
Reaction score
31
I wouldn't think a tune should be effected by doing a reset thats built in.

thats complete crap that he reset your truck, it started running horribly and then just sent you on your way like good luck.

what kinda shop treats people like that? man what they away with these days.

as said, I think I'd put the Tb back on and change plugs. that you have 2 o2's in the same side only is really weird, and definitely could be messing up the codes, like it thinks it's lean on the right side but the right side o2 is on the left side of the engine right next to the left side o2. do you have any kinda scanner at all? to look at fuel trims and do some basic diagnostics?

since it's modded, and seems oddly modded. you might just have to find a good tuner shop that can tune these trucks and have them diagnose whats been done in with it.
Yeah I can look at the data, I have a cheap scanner that can read live. What would I be looking for as far as fuel trims?
 

j91z28d1

Full Access Member
Joined
Feb 28, 2022
Posts
3,223
Reaction score
4,005
normally I'd look at long term trims left and right % and short term left and right %. + should be adding fuel, - is removing fuel. get an idea if the computer thinks it's rich or lean. doesn't really mean that's what it's physical doing. just what the computer thinks. like a vac leak it will need to add fuel, but a miss fire can show up in a few different ways, as rich so it's removing fuel, but also the o2 sensor only reads the amount of air in the exhaust. if unburnt fuel of a miss fire is happening, since the sensor doesn't see the fuel, it only sees the extra o2 from it not burning with the fuel. so it's a bit of a process and sometimes hard to tell not being in person where you can check plugs and other physical signs of what's going on.

also I'd look at both o2 sensor voltage, see if they are swinging back and forth pretty evenly. but with the sensors being wired differently from stock, like 2 on one bank. it kinda makes it. even harder to figure out what's going on.
I'd be seeing if you can't figure out what o2 sensor they have where. should be 4. bank 1. front and rear. bank 2, front and rear. you only needs the fronts, but for it all to work right you kinda need both front sensors to be reading the exhaust of the correct side.
 
OP
OP
User_Name

User_Name

Member
Joined
Feb 14, 2023
Posts
33
Reaction score
31
normally I'd look at long term trims left and right % and short term left and right %. + should be adding fuel, - is removing fuel. get an idea if the computer thinks it's rich or lean. doesn't really mean that's what it's physical doing. just what the computer thinks. like a vac leak it will need to add fuel, but a miss fire can show up in a few different ways, as rich so it's removing fuel, but also the o2 sensor only reads the amount of air in the exhaust. if unburnt fuel of a miss fire is happening, since the sensor doesn't see the fuel, it only sees the extra o2 from it not burning with the fuel. so it's a bit of a process and sometimes hard to tell not being in person where you can check plugs and other physical signs of what's going on.

also I'd look at both o2 sensor voltage, see if they are swinging back and forth pretty evenly. but with the sensors being wired differently from stock, like 2 on one bank. it kinda makes it. even harder to figure out what's going on.
I'd be seeing if you can't figure out what o2 sensor they have where. should be 4. bank 1. front and rear. bank 2, front and rear. you only needs the fronts, but for it all to work right you kinda need both front sensors to be reading the exhaust of the correct side.
Ok.. so I threw the old coil and wires back on 2 and 8. I unplugged the battery for 10 mins, and touched the terminals together for a few seconds. Cranked it and it still runs bad. Very intense gas smell. I can hear the air not combusting and exiting the exhaust. It doesn't stall though. Idle stays somewhat steady in park, still misses. In drive it vibrates.


I did check the codes a few seperate times, and those 3 mysterious ones were no longer present, phew. Back to 0300 and 174. But it still runs way worse than it did before the shop reset the throttle with the computer, with only those same two codes present.

Should I bother putting the old throttle body back on? It was leaking during the smoke test. Or perhaps the intake manifold fooled me and the shop into thinking it was coming from the TB? Come to think of it, there was no visible crack/hole that the smoke was coming from, just kind of under the TB. Shop sounded confident it was comin from TB.

Here's a video of the fuel trim, the camera focuses better in a few seconds.

 

Dustin Jackson

Full Access Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2018
Posts
1,544
Reaction score
1,742
@User_Name Where exactly was it leaking during your smoke test? Keep in mind that if the motor is running the throttle body will be sucking in air by design..
 

Dustin Jackson

Full Access Member
Joined
Aug 9, 2018
Posts
1,544
Reaction score
1,742
@User_Name I would try the old throttle body just to be sure.

As for how to proceed, I would get another opinion on possible leaks near the intake. Avoid the original shop you used so you can get a fresh opinion
 
OP
OP
User_Name

User_Name

Member
Joined
Feb 14, 2023
Posts
33
Reaction score
31
@User_Name I would try the old throttle body just to be sure.

As for how to proceed, I would get another opinion on possible leaks near the intake. Avoid the original shop you used so you can get a fresh opinion
I have one scheduled at the chevy dealership around the corner next Tuesday. I'll swap out the TB in the meantime and report back. Thanks for the replies
 

j91z28d1

Full Access Member
Joined
Feb 28, 2022
Posts
3,223
Reaction score
4,005
wow.. it's adding 29% fuel with the long term and 29% fuel on the short term on bank 2. which is the passenger side I'm pretty sure.

I've honestly not seen they much. I'm pretty sure that's maxed out, ecm throwing all the fuel at that side because it thinks it's lean. someone else here might have a better idea why it's doing that. I bet if you pull a plug in that side they are very black. if they aren't very black. it's gotta be a massive vacuum leak. something they should have seen.

how long was the run time there, I'm guessing it was long enough to get into closed loop. can you look at bank 2 o2 sensor voltage while it's maxing out the trims. I believe that's scanner will graph it out if you select it and hit one of the buttons. there's a blue one laying around here that looks the same as that one we grab for quick looks since everything laptop based is always a hassle lol. if the o2 voltage is saying Max lean it would cause the ecm to add fuel. then you need to pull the plugs to hopefully find out what it's actually doing.

o2 placement is still a wild card. but that's my guess. if o2 says it's lean but plugs are fouled out from ecm adding fuel based off bad o2. I'd throw an o2 sensor at it. or maybe just unhook the o2 sensor, usually when an ecm seen a sensor unhooked it has a stored middle of the road value to use to try and keep itself running. sometimes if an engine runs better with a sensor unhooked it's helpful in diagnosing things


the baro seems low to me. but I'm at sea level. maybe someone else can confirm that's normal where you are. but since bank 1 looks correct. it's probably not an issue.
 

Just Fishing

Can't fix stupid
Joined
Aug 30, 2020
Posts
3,990
Reaction score
8,675
Location
Utah
If the smoke test showed smoke under the throttle body/intake and everything was connected i would start by really looking over that area, maybe try tightening the intake down, and if that didn't work, pull the intake, tape off the ends, and smoke test the intake itself.

If that passed, then I would reinstall with fresh gaskets then re test.

With the intake off, i might be inclined to look for signs of a leak.

Other ideas would be a bad map sensor on top of the intake, and of course the O2 could be bad.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
132,748
Posts
1,873,503
Members
97,573
Latest member
Roblusk
Top