For the future, coils are easy to diagnose. Unplug them one by one. If a coil is bad, you’ll notice when you unplug it the idle doesn’t change at all. I’d check for vacuum leaks. Start it up and while it’s cold spray some starting fluid or carb cleaner on the vacuum hoses to see if you can find one
As a DIY person (not a real technician) my only suggestion is to invest in a quality scan tool to isolate the problem. Electrical vs. fuel delivery. But after following you for a while I suspect you already knew that.
Check your engine mounts. Common to fail on the Envoy/Tralblazer. They will give you false sense that you have a misfire and it’s the mounts. Also, check the throttle body, it tends to gunk up. Also the camshaft positioning sensor can make the vehicle vibrate.
I have that same engine in my Buick and the ignition coils are one of the few things I've ever had replace. That they were nearly 20 years old and had fired millions of times might have been the real issue. But, even the scan tool they loan you at the parts store was able to point at the correct cylinder for the misfire. Other that that and a water pump it's been quite trouble-free and it runs smooth as silk. When it's idleing at temp, you can't hardly tell it's running because it's so well balanced. If it's just running rough, I'd suspect a vacuum leak because that will mess with the AFR. If you have a smoke generator it's not hard to see where a leak is. Otherwise I've had luck with spraying brake cleaner around places I suspect a leak and listening for a change in the idle. One other possible thing to look at that's cheap to do is to get a can of throttle body cleaner and get the extra carbon out of the throttle body. That engine doesn't have an IAC valve, so it does regulate the idle by just slightly keeping the throttle plate open. Just remember not to move the throttle by hand inside the throttle body. Put the key in the ignition, put it in accessory and use the accelerator pedal to open the throttle plate. Then afterward, google the throttle relearn for that car, I can't remember how it went but it's pretty simple. Though, if you leave the battery disconnected for more than a few minutes, the PCU will basically run a relearn for the entire engine and it will rev itself up and down for a few minutes before calming down. In fact, that may have been what you experienced after replacing your coils because you did have the battery disconnected for an extended time.
When you pulled the spark plugs out, I think you should remove the plug from the socket and inspect the ceramic for carbon tracking …a black streak running up and down the ceramic portion. Even a small portion would affect it.
I had an Evoy 2002 300520 km on it changed spar plugs 2 times and never had a problem with the coils did never leek or burn oil best motor i ever had in a car i have been driving cince 1958
My 2 cents.. check the Mass Airflow Sensor as it may need replacing. Second to that, the throttle-body may require some cleaning .. lastly.. check if the O2 sensor is after the Catalytic Convertor, as it may be throwing codes to confuse the engine fuel & air mix. Let me know if it helps. Cheers!
G'evening Jimmy 🤠 . I have a 98' S10 Blazer w/ 315k on it. It has the 4.3 V6 vortech in it. When I bought it it was throwing multiple random cylinder misfire codes, so I changed the oil and the plugs & started running 2 bottles of Berryman B12 chemtool to a full tank to clean the tank, the fuel lines, the pump and the injectors. After 1 full tank it stopped misfiring and runs great. Take my word for it, give Berryman's a try and I bet you'll be glad you did. I hope this helps 🤠 ..
Check the fuel trim. I have a $30 Launch device that reads engine codes and it will also read fuel trim. The Launch professional scanners are not that expensive. For someone like you who has a youtube channel, you should get one.
Jimmy, thanks for another cool video! Do include your lovely lady Farris in more of your videos, she is a cool person! Glad to see your Envoy has an inline 6 engine instead of the dreaded 3.6L V6. You need to buy a good quality scanner tool such as an Autel unit, takes the guesswork out. If this engine is direct injected, it may have a lot of crud on the back side of the intake valves restricting airflow into the engine.
My Envoy has the I6 and that thing is bulletproof. I'd run it dry on coolant once and it got me to a spot where I could get the problem fixed. It's not a DI, but TBI and I'd cleaned it out a few years ago in an attempt to fix my rough idle, but that sadly did little to nothing to fix the issue.
Jimmy i had an 05 trailblazer had the same issue andndid oretty much all that you have done to it but my problem was throttle body . I cleaned it many times till i decided to change it problem fixed .hope it helps
You could have variable valve timing sensor and the sensor next to it that's bad but if those two sensors were bad your cruise control would only works sporadically and it won't trip the check engine light and those are the sensors in the head right underneath the duct hosing for the intake from the air box.
Hi Jimmy of One Road. Love watching your show. In this video (time index 10:57), you mentioned manifold gasket and fuel injectors. I would smoke-test it for vacuum leaks. As with fuel injectors, when is the last time the fuel filter was replaced? Start with something cheap first.
Could be a few things.. Clogged fuel injectors from sitting, fuel filter, vacuum leak, dirty throttle body, idle air sensor, maf sensor.. But just throwing parts at it for something that mild is kinda silly. Get a scan tool or take it into a shop
I like your videos, I recommend everyone have a car to own a scan tool. It helps me a lot, I can diagnose the problem by research the code and finding out what happens to my car and fixed it myself. Rough idle can be many different things, leaks of the valve gasket, clogged injectors, O2 sensor issues, air fuel mixture, compression, dirty throttle, dirty airflow sensor…I will start with cleaning throttle, sensor, and clean injectors, then checking for leaks next before replacing parts
Take it to a shop they have equipment/tool to check each coil and can tell which need replace and which don't. Dont have to wast money if the rest are in good shape
Also try replacing the injectors and make a video on that. Keep up the good work. I love your channel. I too have a hard time diagnosing my car problems. It’s part of learning.
First order of business is to buy a quality scanner. You probably know that. After confirming no codes than you can skip checking sensors. Could be engine mounts worn or a vaccum leak. Spray brake clean around the intake tube & If you hit it the rpm’s will dip way down for a few seconds. Lastly, clean the throttle body.
Looks like the ignition coils are Wet soaking from what looks like a oil leak into the spark plug wells some spark plug wells were brown and wet and some were shiny and dry 4:09 @1Road
Thanks for sharing your troubleshooting on this. Just a thought, have you done any cleaning of the intake manifold and injectors? I was able to see some pretty heavy carbon on one of the piston heads too when you provided that top down plug out view. Let me know if my thought helps you beat this particular gremlin.
Have it scanned to see the misfire counts if there are any. Also have the injectors professionally cleaned. Also make sure you map sensor and throttle body are clean.
That's probably just how it runs, if there's no codes I wouldn't worry about it, newer GM's love throwing check engine lights for every little thing so if it didnt then just drive it. If you realy think its misfiring you could get a scanner that reads live data so you can see if theres a slight missfire that's not happening enough to set the check engine light
As a few other were commenting & even you said near the end of the video... Possibly a vacuum leak. Follow up with a video on that, especially spraying a non flammable chemical around the intake manifold area & see if the idle changes Also, AutoZone, Advanced Auto, O'Reilly's, or similar parts store in your area offer FREE OBD2 scanning. If it's a general P3000 code, then yeah... Check for that leak Let us know on an update video soon!
Idle air control or clean the mass air flow sensor with some cleaner? Could always get a cheap fuel pressure tester and see if it's reading a couple less than it should be
I have an 05" Chevy Trailblazer with the same, 4.2 lit engine, with less than 50K on it. And from my research on this engine. the Idle Air Control Valve seems to be way more of a problem with this engine than the Coil Packs ever were. And it's easy to check the Mass Air Flow Sensor and to clean it, which I would've looked at both of these areas way before I'd ever spent the money on a set of Coil Packs! And who replaces every, single Coil Pack without checking them first? Jimmy, apparently, lol. Maybe he's got more money than I have? 🙂 🙂
@@namrednop Apparently he doesn't have money for a basic scan tool but enough to buy all 6 coil packs lol.. He could've gotten a pretty nice OBD reader for that kind of money
My chevy suburban for the last three weeks or so has been misfiring after it gets hot and is driven slowly in a parking lot or anywhere slowly, but on the hiway is seems to run fine; I replaced my coils, wires, plugs, crankshaft position sensor, and the fuel pump, my truck has more miles on it, 350 000 km's, but it's well looked after, I finally broke down and took it to our local chevy dealer last week, they charged my almost $500 and said its your pre cat oxygen sensors... these hadn't been changed since 2015 so I ordered them, they wanted $900 to change the two, they'll be in tomorrow and hopefully it fixes our issue. Maybe that will help with yours?
Get a scanner for the price of the new coils and the mechanic’s labor charge. It would tell you which cylinder is the problem. You could also have a vacuum leak.
Even the scanner they let you borrow at the auto parts store will give you a code telling you which cylinder is misfiring. I've got that same engine in my Buick and I replaced two of them individually as the codes indicated. No problems other than the coils are 20 years old and have fired millions upon millons of times. Better to simply drop about $300 or so and replace the coils with their oem equivalents.
Try running some fuel injector cleaner like royal purple or anything that contains PEA (nitrogen baised cleaner). Maybe the mass airflow sensor is dirty? Maybe it just needs an "Italian" tune up..... flooring it from stops and driving on the highway.
dude... you don't need a fancy expensive scanner. launch makes a scanner, x431 for gm. i bought one for my old car. it'll show you everything if you understand the numbers. it's reasonably cheap at 180. i got mine for fuel trim resets. it does all that stuff and i think it can even code computers and keys. idk, never tried it. if you want a good guy on here to learn about live data and diagnosing, schodinger's box is on another level of intelligence and he breaks it down pretty well in his videos. i went through this on my old gmc.. i would also point out that mechanical issue with a miss won't always kick a dtc. mine ended up being a combination of injectors and coils. sending a 0300 code, running ROUGH and crazy fuel trims. i've also seen an oil change solve so missing like behavior on vvt engines. had to change the oil before it was due on my old car once lol. gone now and driving a brand new canyon.
Can measure their impedance... may or may not show which one is bad... if any of them. I actually turned off misfire counter on my LQ9 build as its problematic. That online 6 engine is super cool though. I'd love to build one of those up.
Clean your mass airflow sensor and your throttle body paying close attention to the throttle body butterfly. My Honda CR-V was running rough, especially with the AC on, and I cleaned those components and it smoothed up. My Honda has 260.000 some odd miles and still going strong.
Sounds odd, I know, but have you checked your engine mounts? Your diagnostics aren't seeing a problem so it may be more of a physical issue, and bad motor mounts can cause what seems like a misfire type shake and any extra engine movement can produce all kinds of odd external sounds,
I'm not sure if it has a crankshaft position sensor but you might want to check that I know mom's high-end a had a problem with that and the vehicle ran really rough when the sensor was felling
Here's something else to check. My f150 had a rough idle. Turned out my alternator was not putting out enough voltage. I had it rebuilt and rough idle is gone.
Maybe it’s needs the old Italian tune up. 😅😅😅 When was the last time the pedal hit father floor? Cleaned the webs out of the exhaust 😂😂😂 Also today some scanners are not to much. Some connect to your phone via bluetooth and they are not that expensive. I bought the cheap one. The craftsman’s one
spark plugs can fail internally also. That rear spark plug looked questionable. next step would be getting a compression test on each cylinder. take it to a reputable shop for that test.
I'm surprised you've never ordered a scan tool.. Without a scan tool my guess would be changing the mass airflow sensor. If that thing is bad it's not going to idle correctly. It regulates and lets the engine know how much air to flow into the engine. It also lets the engine know how much fuel to flow into the motor.
Pocket full of solutions looking for a problem, imo. Fill up with a mid grade or better fuel on top of a double dose of Marvel Mystery oil. That will cleanup that bit of carbon a little and certainly shine up the injectors.
Check the variable cam solenoid. Its on the passenger side behind the power steering pump. They get gummed up and can cause a ruff idle and poor economy. I would clean it and see if it makes a difference. If that helps they are cheap and easy to replace.
Had that problem with a couple of Crown Vic’s. Had to put new intake with gaskets to fix it. Doesn’t take much moisture or oil to mess the coils up. Don’t know if that’s the problem, but it definitely needs to be clean and dry.
This is why I hate/love GM cars. My 2003 Chevy Astro van with a Vortex 4.3L had similar issues. Changed spark plug, coil, distributor cap,etc. I had the ECM swapped for a rebuilt one. All to no avail. My 2008 Chevy HHR with the 2.2L same roughness as it aged. Later my 2014 Cadillac ATS 2.5L inline4 did not run smooth after 5years. (current car) My 2016 Cadillac CTS AWD 2.0L is good but once these cars hit 6 years or after60K miles..issues pop up. I like the advice others gave: engine mounts, MAP sensor, camshaft positioning sensor, oxygen sensor, throttle body and vacuum leaks. I go broke hunting these issues down ...even mechanics with scan tools cannot always find my cars issues but take it in and see what they charge to diagnose it. Just sucks overall. Love your videos...keep up the good work!
Are u burning 87 octane it is no good they have raised the ethanol and not told bet if u start burning 89 has it will solve your problems side note have a 96 Chevy 5.7 Silverado with 81,000 org Miles would not r barely start without starting fluid if it sat for day switch to 89 starts and get better fuel mileage side note which will drive u crazy The state of Iowa land of corn does not sell ethanol gas talk about Sticking it to you 🤔🤑😖
As a former Mr. Goodwrench tech at no leass than 3 dealerships, ignition coils go bad like water! After market coils are junk but then, so are most replacement parts these days. Buy Toyota!
You can do that, but video shows that it made no difference with new or original coils... The problem is elsewhere Ohm out will show continuity if good, and open circuit if bad I had a specific code p0305 out of a 6 cylinder Honda engine that definitely was just a bad coil on that one cylinder #5 & confirmed with the ohms test that something internal was broken
appears #6 was a dirty plug. not firing. #5 plug appears firing was sporadic the rest looked fine. actually the #6 plug should be replaced or cleaned(?) [id replace it] & #5 as these might eventually work, but they are dirty & might never be as good as they should be. appears coil pak #6 wasnt firing #5 now n then [sporadic] hoping its the pacs & not something else. yes its odd the light didnt come on. a miss fire will often show up in code checking. mine has & i have a cheapie code reader from walmart also invest in some good mas sensor cleaner & use it. that will help most efi systems. the 02 sensors are another matter - those connect to the computer for adjustments needed in your air/fuel mix [gee I hate computer stuff in cars] ugh even with the scan tools it is still just a guess at what it "might" be on yours Id replace those back 2 plugs. that ought to smooth it up even more. (?) still a guess ;)
You need a quality scan tool and learn how to use it. This is what I tell guys that diagnose by guess, “guessing is expensive, how much can you afford “
For the future, coils are easy to diagnose. Unplug them one by one. If a coil is bad, you’ll notice when you unplug it the idle doesn’t change at all.
I’d check for vacuum leaks. Start it up and while it’s cold spray some starting fluid or carb cleaner on the vacuum hoses to see if you can find one
As a DIY person (not a real technician) my only suggestion is to invest in a quality scan tool to isolate the problem. Electrical vs. fuel delivery. But after following you for a while I suspect you already knew that.
There is always more then one way to diagnose a problem you don’t have to have a height priced scanner
Check your engine mounts. Common to fail on the Envoy/Tralblazer. They will give you false sense that you have a misfire and it’s the mounts.
Also, check the throttle body, it tends to gunk up. Also the camshaft positioning sensor can make the vehicle vibrate.
DEFINITELY!!!
Agree
This has me thinking about my mounts with 250k lol
I have that same engine in my Buick and the ignition coils are one of the few things I've ever had replace. That they were nearly 20 years old and had fired millions of times might have been the real issue. But, even the scan tool they loan you at the parts store was able to point at the correct cylinder for the misfire. Other that that and a water pump it's been quite trouble-free and it runs smooth as silk. When it's idleing at temp, you can't hardly tell it's running because it's so well balanced.
If it's just running rough, I'd suspect a vacuum leak because that will mess with the AFR. If you have a smoke generator it's not hard to see where a leak is. Otherwise I've had luck with spraying brake cleaner around places I suspect a leak and listening for a change in the idle.
One other possible thing to look at that's cheap to do is to get a can of throttle body cleaner and get the extra carbon out of the throttle body. That engine doesn't have an IAC valve, so it does regulate the idle by just slightly keeping the throttle plate open. Just remember not to move the throttle by hand inside the throttle body. Put the key in the ignition, put it in accessory and use the accelerator pedal to open the throttle plate. Then afterward, google the throttle relearn for that car, I can't remember how it went but it's pretty simple.
Though, if you leave the battery disconnected for more than a few minutes, the PCU will basically run a relearn for the entire engine and it will rev itself up and down for a few minutes before calming down. In fact, that may have been what you experienced after replacing your coils because you did have the battery disconnected for an extended time.
When you pulled the spark plugs out, I think you should remove the plug from the socket and inspect the ceramic for carbon tracking …a black streak running up and down the ceramic portion. Even a small portion would affect it.
I had an Evoy 2002 300520 km on it changed spar plugs 2 times and never had a problem with the coils did never leek or burn oil best motor i ever had in a car i have been driving cince 1958
My 2 cents.. check the Mass Airflow Sensor as it may need replacing. Second to that, the throttle-body may require some cleaning .. lastly.. check if the O2 sensor is after the Catalytic Convertor, as it may be throwing codes to confuse the engine fuel & air mix. Let me know if it helps.
Cheers!
G'evening Jimmy 🤠 . I have a 98' S10 Blazer w/ 315k on it. It has the 4.3 V6 vortech in it. When I bought it it was throwing multiple random cylinder misfire codes, so I changed the oil and the plugs & started running 2 bottles of Berryman B12 chemtool to a full tank to clean the tank, the fuel lines, the pump and the injectors. After 1 full tank it stopped misfiring and runs great. Take my word for it, give Berryman's a try and I bet you'll be glad you did. I hope this helps 🤠 ..
Check the fuel trim. I have a $30 Launch device that reads engine codes and it will also read fuel trim. The Launch professional scanners are not that expensive. For someone like you who has a youtube channel, you should get one.
Correct
Another grand slam of a video Jimmy! Always nice when the Mrs makes an appearance!
Jimmy, thanks for another cool video! Do include your lovely lady Farris in more of your videos, she is a cool person!
Glad to see your Envoy has an inline 6 engine instead of the dreaded 3.6L V6. You need to buy a good quality scanner tool such as an Autel unit, takes the guesswork out.
If this engine is direct injected, it may have a lot of crud on the back side of the intake valves restricting airflow into the engine.
My Envoy has the I6 and that thing is bulletproof. I'd run it dry on coolant once and it got me to a spot where I could get the problem fixed.
It's not a DI, but TBI and I'd cleaned it out a few years ago in an attempt to fix my rough idle, but that sadly did little to nothing to fix the issue.
All parts cannons aside, you did what you thought was best. If it's vibrating, it might be your engine mounts.
Jimmy i had an 05 trailblazer had the same issue andndid oretty much all that you have done to it but my problem was throttle body . I cleaned it many times till i decided to change it problem fixed .hope it helps
You could have variable valve timing sensor and the sensor next to it that's bad but if those two sensors were bad your cruise control would only works sporadically and it won't trip the check engine light and those are the sensors in the head right underneath the duct hosing for the intake from the air box.
Auto zone loves you guys! Here comes the parts cannon!
Hi Jimmy of One Road. Love watching your show. In this video (time index 10:57), you mentioned manifold gasket and fuel injectors. I would smoke-test it for vacuum leaks. As with fuel injectors, when is the last time the fuel filter was replaced? Start with something cheap first.
Could be a few things.. Clogged fuel injectors from sitting, fuel filter, vacuum leak, dirty throttle body, idle air sensor, maf sensor.. But just throwing parts at it for something that mild is kinda silly. Get a scan tool or take it into a shop
Don't you think he would have tried most of thos
I bought an Xtool D8. I have cleared, diagnosed and fixed all my cars: best money spent. I am a Shade tree mechanic, with patients
Man, hope you get more miles out of those Delphi coil pack. I’m still running 4 of the 6 original packs on my 04 Envoy with over 335k miles👍
Ngk...not Delco
@@johnwagner4559he meant the original. Delphi
I like your videos, I recommend everyone have a car to own a scan tool. It helps me a lot, I can diagnose the problem by research the code and finding out what happens to my car and fixed it myself. Rough idle can be many different things, leaks of the valve gasket, clogged injectors, O2 sensor issues, air fuel mixture, compression, dirty throttle, dirty airflow sensor…I will start with cleaning throttle, sensor, and clean injectors, then checking for leaks next before replacing parts
Will this detect without a check light on?
For the cost of those coils, could have bought a GM Tech2 or scanner from Launch.
You might try cleaning the throttle body. My 2006 had a similar issue and it went away after I cleaned it.
Take it to a shop they have equipment/tool to check each coil and can tell which need replace and which don't. Dont have to wast money if the rest are in good shape
Also try replacing the injectors and make a video on that. Keep up the good work. I love your channel. I too have a hard time diagnosing my car problems. It’s part of learning.
First order of business is to buy a quality scanner. You probably know that. After confirming no codes than you can skip checking sensors. Could be engine mounts worn or a vaccum leak. Spray brake clean around the intake tube &
If you hit it the rpm’s will dip way down for a few seconds. Lastly, clean the throttle body.
Looks like the ignition coils are Wet soaking from what looks like a oil leak into the spark plug wells some spark plug wells were brown and wet and some were shiny and dry 4:09 @1Road
There was only one that looked a little brown. The others looked nice and clean. I didn't see any wetness
Thanks for sharing your troubleshooting on this. Just a thought, have you done any cleaning of the intake manifold and injectors? I was able to see some pretty heavy carbon on one of the piston heads too when you provided that top down plug out view. Let me know if my thought helps you beat this particular gremlin.
Have it scanned to see the misfire counts if there are any. Also have the injectors professionally cleaned. Also make sure you map sensor and throttle body are clean.
That's probably just how it runs, if there's no codes I wouldn't worry about it, newer GM's love throwing check engine lights for every little thing so if it didnt then just drive it. If you realy think its misfiring you could get a scanner that reads live data so you can see if theres a slight missfire that's not happening enough to set the check engine light
As a few other were commenting & even you said near the end of the video... Possibly a vacuum leak.
Follow up with a video on that, especially spraying a non flammable chemical around the intake manifold area & see if the idle changes
Also, AutoZone, Advanced Auto, O'Reilly's, or similar parts store in your area offer FREE OBD2 scanning.
If it's a general P3000 code, then yeah... Check for that leak
Let us know on an update video soon!
Idle air control or clean the mass air flow sensor with some cleaner? Could always get a cheap fuel pressure tester and see if it's reading a couple less than it should be
I have an 05" Chevy Trailblazer with the same, 4.2 lit engine, with less than 50K on it. And from my research on this engine. the Idle Air Control Valve seems to be way more of a problem with this engine than the Coil Packs ever were. And it's easy to check the Mass Air Flow Sensor and to clean it, which I would've looked at both of these areas way before I'd ever spent the money on a set of Coil Packs! And who replaces every, single Coil Pack without checking them first? Jimmy, apparently, lol. Maybe he's got more money than I have? 🙂 🙂
@@namrednop Apparently he doesn't have money for a basic scan tool but enough to buy all 6 coil packs lol.. He could've gotten a pretty nice OBD reader for that kind of money
My chevy suburban for the last three weeks or so has been misfiring after it gets hot and is driven slowly in a parking lot or anywhere slowly, but on the hiway is seems to run fine; I replaced my coils, wires, plugs, crankshaft position sensor, and the fuel pump, my truck has more miles on it, 350 000 km's, but it's well looked after, I finally broke down and took it to our local chevy dealer last week, they charged my almost $500 and said its your pre cat oxygen sensors... these hadn't been changed since 2015 so I ordered them, they wanted $900 to change the two, they'll be in tomorrow and hopefully it fixes our issue. Maybe that will help with yours?
Can also just do a major tune up. Clean MAF sensor, run seafoam through top end, check fuel pressure, etc.
Holy parts cannon, Batman! Not a surprise that a coil set didn't fix it. Too bad there weren't any codes to set you in a particular direction.
You have a good channel! It deserves a good scanner!
Get a scanner for the price of the new coils and the mechanic’s labor charge. It would tell you which cylinder is the problem. You could also have a vacuum leak.
Even the scanner they let you borrow at the auto parts store will give you a code telling you which cylinder is misfiring. I've got that same engine in my Buick and I replaced two of them individually as the codes indicated. No problems other than the coils are 20 years old and have fired millions upon millons of times. Better to simply drop about $300 or so and replace the coils with their oem equivalents.
Jimmy, I been watching and waiting for that magic bullet moment. One of these times it will happen.
Try running some fuel injector cleaner like royal purple or anything that contains PEA (nitrogen baised cleaner). Maybe the mass airflow sensor is dirty? Maybe it just needs an "Italian" tune up..... flooring it from stops and driving on the highway.
dude... you don't need a fancy expensive scanner. launch makes a scanner, x431 for gm. i bought one for my old car. it'll show you everything if you understand the numbers. it's reasonably cheap at 180. i got mine for fuel trim resets. it does all that stuff and i think it can even code computers and keys. idk, never tried it. if you want a good guy on here to learn about live data and diagnosing, schodinger's box is on another level of intelligence and he breaks it down pretty well in his videos. i went through this on my old gmc.. i would also point out that mechanical issue with a miss won't always kick a dtc. mine ended up being a combination of injectors and coils. sending a 0300 code, running ROUGH and crazy fuel trims. i've also seen an oil change solve so missing like behavior on vvt engines. had to change the oil before it was due on my old car once lol. gone now and driving a brand new canyon.
Hey Jimmy I love your videos. Will there be an actual diagnosis to this video soon to come?
Have you tried the code reader
Just the way it runs
I’ve been dealing with the same stuff with my mothers trailblazer for years!!
Can measure their impedance... may or may not show which one is bad... if any of them. I actually turned off misfire counter on my LQ9 build as its problematic. That online 6 engine is super cool though. I'd love to build one of those up.
Clean your mass airflow sensor and your throttle body paying close attention to the throttle body butterfly. My Honda CR-V was running rough, especially with the AC on, and I cleaned those components and it smoothed up. My Honda has 260.000 some odd miles and still going strong.
You could figure it out. Sometimes we have to get lucky to fix things. I subscribed. 👍
I recomend that you buy seafoam transtune put it inside with high octane fuel and take you vehicle for a long highway drive then change the oil.
@1road how much do you want for the coil packs?
Sounds odd, I know, but have you checked your engine mounts? Your diagnostics aren't seeing a problem so it may be more of a physical issue, and bad motor mounts can cause what seems like a misfire type shake and any extra engine movement can produce all kinds of odd external sounds,
I'm not sure if it has a crankshaft position sensor but you might want to check that I know mom's high-end a had a problem with that and the vehicle ran really rough when the sensor was felling
Your wife seems so nice. Your a lucky man. You two look great together
How did it "road test"...curious since video not showing leaving garage
Could try checking the throttle plate for any carbon build up or idle air control valve if it’s sticking
This is just if I was trying to do it at home other than that I would seek a professional tech for diagnosis
Here's something else to check. My f150 had a rough idle. Turned out my alternator was not putting out enough voltage. I had it rebuilt and rough idle is gone.
That’s interesting. I’ll check it out
Uh can the alternator be bad even though it doesn't read anything bad on the tester?
Looks like a vacuum leak. It's pretty common on cars with plastic intakes.
Maybe it’s needs the old Italian tune up. 😅😅😅 When was the last time the pedal hit father floor? Cleaned the webs out of the exhaust 😂😂😂
Also today some scanners are not to much. Some connect to your phone via bluetooth and they are not that expensive. I bought the cheap one. The craftsman’s one
spark plugs can fail internally also. That rear spark plug looked questionable. next step would be getting a compression test on each cylinder. take it to a reputable shop for that test.
Clean the throttle , flow sensor & replace the fuel filter then add injectors cleaner, drive the car for long trip. Everything will be much smoother
I'm surprised you've never ordered a scan tool.. Without a scan tool my guess would be changing the mass airflow sensor. If that thing is bad it's not going to idle correctly. It regulates and lets the engine know how much air to flow into the engine. It also lets the engine know how much fuel to flow into the motor.
Pocket full of solutions looking for a problem, imo. Fill up with a mid grade or better fuel on top of a double dose of Marvel Mystery oil. That will cleanup that bit of carbon a little and certainly shine up the injectors.
Check the variable cam solenoid. Its on the passenger side behind the power steering pump. They get gummed up and can cause a ruff idle and poor economy. I would clean it and see if it makes a difference. If that helps they are cheap and easy to replace.
A bad knock sensor could make gas engine sound like diesel engine but check engine light would comes on.
You might want to test the spark plugs with a volt / ohm meter
I'm thinking the same thing
@@Airwolf2030 that is a great idea to do that because they might have a crack in the porcelain only thing is what is ohms reading on those spark plugs
It sounds like intake gasket or one of the fuel injector my opinion of course.
Sounds like a PCV issue. Hope it works.
Some of the spark plug housings are wet and others are dry that looks like issue with the Coil packs
He just put new ones in
Had that problem with a couple of Crown Vic’s. Had to put new intake with gaskets to fix it. Doesn’t take much moisture or oil to mess the coils up. Don’t know if that’s the problem, but it definitely needs to be clean and dry.
Does it have Auto fuel management. Maybe one of the lifters is bad.
This is why I hate/love GM cars. My 2003 Chevy Astro van with a Vortex 4.3L had similar issues. Changed spark plug, coil, distributor cap,etc. I had the ECM swapped for a rebuilt one. All to no avail.
My 2008 Chevy HHR with the 2.2L same roughness as it aged. Later my 2014 Cadillac ATS 2.5L inline4 did not run smooth after 5years.
(current car) My 2016 Cadillac CTS AWD 2.0L is good but once these cars hit 6 years or after60K miles..issues pop up.
I like the advice others gave: engine mounts, MAP sensor, camshaft positioning sensor, oxygen sensor, throttle body and vacuum leaks. I go broke hunting these issues down ...even mechanics with scan tools cannot always find my cars issues but take it in and see what they charge to diagnose it. Just sucks overall.
Love your videos...keep up the good work!
Exhaust manifold gasket leak?
You may have a broken exhaust manifold bolt. It will create a rough sound at idle.. and seem normal driving.
Hmmm, should you also hear that ticking noise if it's an exhaust leak?
check your air flow sensor?
The vvt solenoid or bad timing chains.
Check timing, engine and transmission mounts.
Happy late birthday day🎉
Are u burning 87 octane it is no good they have raised the ethanol and not told bet if u start burning
89 has it will solve your problems side note have a 96 Chevy 5.7 Silverado with
81,000 org Miles would not r barely start without starting fluid if it sat for day switch to 89 starts and get better fuel mileage side note which will drive u crazy
The state of Iowa land of corn does not sell ethanol gas talk about
Sticking it to you 🤔🤑😖
Engine mounts?
You have to determine if it's a misfire, vacuum leak, engine shake, ruff idle.
Fuel injector cleaner?
Stupid question, did you check the spark plug gaps?
I have the exact same problem.
Check if the PCV is clear and clean.. Check for vacuum leak
Thanks!
No problem, thank you!
@@1RoadGarageDid you ever find what the problem was?
As a former Mr. Goodwrench tech at no leass than 3 dealerships, ignition coils go bad like water! After market coils are junk but then, so are most replacement parts these days. Buy Toyota!
Haha! Didn’t see that last sentence coming. Never owned a Toyota but would love to. 👍
Can you ohm out those coils?
You can do that, but video shows that it made no difference with new or original coils... The problem is elsewhere
Ohm out will show continuity if good, and open circuit if bad
I had a specific code p0305 out of a 6 cylinder Honda engine that definitely was just a bad coil on that one cylinder #5 & confirmed with the ohms test that something internal was broken
Timing Chains?
Check your Mass Air Flow Sensor
appears #6 was a dirty plug. not firing.
#5 plug appears firing was sporadic
the rest looked fine.
actually the #6 plug should be replaced or cleaned(?) [id replace it] & #5 as these might eventually work, but they are dirty & might never be as good as they should be.
appears coil pak #6 wasnt firing
#5 now n then [sporadic]
hoping its the pacs & not something else.
yes its odd the light didnt come on.
a miss fire will often show up in code checking. mine has & i have a cheapie code reader from walmart
also invest in some good mas sensor cleaner & use it. that will help most efi systems.
the 02 sensors are another matter - those connect to the computer for adjustments needed in your air/fuel mix
[gee I hate computer stuff in cars] ugh
even with the scan tools it is still just a guess at what it "might" be
on yours Id replace those back 2 plugs. that ought to smooth it up even more. (?)
still a guess ;)
Yeah... Fire the parts cannon again loaded with six new injectors. It's probably not them either, but what the heck. 😬
I know it's not true for all makes. But sometimes when you change ignition coils you have to have them reprogrammed🤷♂️ let us know👍👊🇺🇸🍺
No pun tang tonight!!
Do you have a code reader with live data? That might point you in proper direction.
Please read a book.
Probably should have changed the plugs. Bad plug can cause a misfire. Also, check the gap
He did 10,000 miles ago, guess you didn't hear him.
You need a quality scan tool and learn how to use it. This is what I tell guys that diagnose by guess, “guessing is expensive, how much can you afford “
I'm just surprised the fuel gauge works!
Dirty fuel filter can make it seem like there's a misfire as well.
You could have a dirty injector..seafoam or berryman's
Definitely not a pro myself but fuel injector cleaning might be a cheaper fix than replacement.
Made in Mexico that's why they are the best 👌 👍
You should buy a scanner in a multimeter just wanna help you
Just take it out and spray, wait until a hour until dry