The tips look well worn and would like to know how many miles they were in the engine. Also, did you do a compression test while apart?
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Those plugs came out after about 50k milesWhat is your plug gap? I don't see any anti-sieze on the threads either.
About 50k, probably a bit under. No compression test, don't have the equipment. Considering getting a kit. Is this one worth while? Anyone with experience with it here?The tips look well worn and would like to know how many miles they were in the engine. Also, did you do a compression test while apart?
For at least a one time test, the HB kit should be fine.Those plugs came out after about 50k miles
About 50k, probably a bit under. No compression test, don't have the equipment. Considering getting a kit. Is this one worth while? Anyone with experience with it here?
Compression Test Kit
The tips look well worn and would like to know how many miles they were in the engine. Also, did you do a compression test while apart?
The first 400 miles after all the work, ran perfect. Then with the flip of a switch it seems, cylinder 2 misfires almost constantly. I could swap the plug and wire with another, but just doesn't seem likely. They both look fine, feel fine and are brand new.So the misfire moved to #2 after the new work?
I haven’t had any issues with the two Delco (made by Dephi) MPFI kits, but every now and then you’ll hear someone have issues with other brands. It’s probably like most things - people only say something when it’s broken.
If you can rule out the ignition (swap parts with other cylinders and see if it moves) then that may be the way to start. To me, odds are low that your new Delco parts are bad out of the box but anything could happen.
They do sell an injector balance tester but I’ve never used one. It should compare all eight pressure drops as each injector is opened, presumably from the Schrader valve at the intake. I’d think that all eight should be about the same within some tolerance level, so any outlier would stand out.
Any issues with starting? A fuel pressure test wouldn’t hurt to see if you’re losing pressure (leaking injector).
Last, once the injector was seated did you take it back out? They barely clip in to begin with so it is tempting to try moving them around a bit. Per Delco, once seated they shouldn’t be removed lest the clips break.
I will swap plug and wire tomorrow, see what happens, although not often new part could be defective.My best guess is that it’s one of your new parts since your old symptoms went away and a new one appeared.
Something isn’t right at #2 - fuel, spark or air. I’d put air to the side given the compression test and your lack of an issue at that cylinder before the ignition and fuel part changes. Spark could be checked by swapping the plug, then the wire or just start with a spark test - comparing the spark quality with non-misfiring cylinders. It really could just be a bum cap; even the Delco plant probably has off-days.
Fuel would be either the injector pressure drop test or a general pressure test. If you aren’t having trouble starting it, that may rule out a leaking injector.
The only aftermarket distributor that I’ve bought (and I think you should save your money on that until you check the ignition components) was a Summit brand since it had metal cap screw tabs versus the plastic ones that like to crack on the stock ones. The distributor itself was fine, but their cap failed within a few weeks and caused a misfire on cylinder three so bad that it wouldn’t start with that plug connected. It’d start and “run” on seven cylinders, just not eight. A Delco cap fixed that.
As for new versus reman, I’d pick new on just about anything that required any effort to replace if it was bad out of the box.
I’d probably do the spark test first.