Engine Misfire Codes
Engine Misfire Codes
Hey guys, 4 weeks ago I finally got my tune, and I love it, it really brings the car to life. The week after the tune I changed oil, oil filter, and plugs as my car just hit 100K miles. The week after the oil change my check engine light came on, but turned off before I got the chance to have it checked. Well, a week later and its on again so I just got the code read and its throwing misfire codes on all 4 cylinders as well as a P0300 code. Any suggestions on where I can start to fix this issue?
Do you feel misfired happening? Like do you get a flashing CEL under heavy acceleration or do you feel it miss at idle or any other time? A possibility is your spark plugs aren't gaped correctly giving you spark blow out under high boost.
I dont feel any misfires, even under heavy acceleration. Ever since the tune cold starts lope hard as hell like it has a cam. Other than that I havent noticed any performance changes. No flashing CEL, it just stays on.
Sounds like your cold starts may be were you are getting misfires. If you rev it up a bit when it is doing this does it sort of sound like a Subaru boxer engine?
Lets slow the roll on replacing coil packs.
What plugs did you use and what gap?
Rough cold start is the first sign of fouled plugs, they usually start acting up in high load next.
What plugs did you use and what gap?
Rough cold start is the first sign of fouled plugs, they usually start acting up in high load next.
AcDelco irridiums, not 100% sure about the gap. The lope started immediately after the tune and before the misfires started showing up.
In short... It was tuned for power enrichment and not overall. Sad but common.
Last edited by Henry3959; Feb 16, 2018 at 05:22 PM.
Is there anything else he should know? I don't know a thing when it comes to tuning and he doesn't have much experience with LNFs
With HP Tuners he can force it into Open Loop and see how rich he has it. That is why it is there.
You can't with the LNF, it's not a standard GM ecu with a VE table. It has a wideband sensor stock, so it adjusts the trims so someone can adjust the maf table from the trims. There is no VE table for an LNF since its a torque based ecu.
You still have fan control, but none on the fuel pump. Also no active adjustments (or whatever it's called) so timing and VVT adjustments require reflash. It's a Bosch ECU and supporting system similar to VAG systems
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tbellazzi
2.0L LSJ Performance Tech
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Aug 16, 2011 09:00 PM



