02YukDenXL
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- Joined
- Aug 11, 2014
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How long have you had the issue? Have you done any work to it? Brought it to a mechanic? Etc?
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So I've been riding out this misfire lately. I haven't had time to work on the truck (We just moved and have 3 kids so its been a bit crazy).
Brought the truck in for an oil change to a newer mechanic. I've been going to him for about 6 months now. I ditched my old mechanic after he jerked me around over a power steering pump fiasco. Asked him to look at the misfire again.
He found three broken bolts on each exhaust manifold. He thinks this is potentially causing the misfire. Thoughts?
Based on your good upstream O2 voltages and your very weak downsteam voltages, I'm not surprised at all. The good news is you had an exhaust leak pre-downstream O2's which leaned out those sensors.... which is a sign of bad cats. Can you get an up-to-date video of your scan tool showing LTFT (1 and 2), STFT (1 and 2), H02S b1s1, b1s2, b2s1 and b2s2 after the engine is up to operating temp (ECT over 190F)?
My thinking is if you still have lean LTFT's you may just have dirty (partially clogged) injector nozzles (pintles). You may need to try a fuel system cleaning with something like a terraclean system.
Found this on the web...
look at the Short Term Fuel Trim (STFT) and Long Term Fuel Trim (LTFT) values. Normal range is plus or minus 8. If the numbers are +10 or higher for STFT and LTFT, the engine is running LEAN. If you rev the engine to 1500 to 2000 rpm and hold it for a minute or so, and the STFT value drops back down to a more normal reading, it confirms the engine has a vacuum leak at idle. If the STFT value does not change much, the lean fuel condition is more likely a fuel delivery problem (weak fuel pump, restricted fuel filter, dirty fuel injectors or a leaky fuel pressure regulator) than a vacuum leak.
Pretty much sound like everything you tried
That is fuel trim diag 101 and it is spot on. I'm curious to see what the LTFT's read at 2500 RPM and held there for a few seconds.