misfires under boost
i have a 1988 volvo 740 turbo wagon and it misfires under boost. ive replaced the entire ignition system, distributor, cap, wires, lugs, ignition box, lately what ive tryed to do to fix it is a colder plug and all that did was make it run worse and misfire at idle heres a video
If it's misfiring at idle you can disconnect the injectors one at a time and note if the idle speed changes more with one cylinder than another to possibly isolate the problem cylinder. The iac/idle motor/auto air valve whatever you want to call it should try to keep the idle speed constant - but it usually takes a second to kick in and stabilize the idle, or you can disconnect it (if it will still idle ) to be able to check the idle drop per cylinder without the idle motor trying to intervene.
Check for vacuum leaks with a can of carb cleaner - Spray with the nozzle at suspected areas and if the engine ingests carb cleaner through a vacuum leak the engine speed will change! Sure you can use a smoke tester, but a can of carb cleaner is faster and cheaper.
Check for vacuum leaks with a can of carb cleaner - Spray with the nozzle at suspected areas and if the engine ingests carb cleaner through a vacuum leak the engine speed will change! Sure you can use a smoke tester, but a can of carb cleaner is faster and cheaper.
Last edited by hoonk; Jun 19, 2022 at 04:51 PM.
If it's misfiring at idle you can disconnect the injectors one at a time and note if the idle speed changes more with one cylinder than another to possibly isolate the problem cylinder. The iac/idle motor/auto air valve whatever you want to call it should try to keep the idle speed constant - but it usually takes a second to kick in and stabilize the idle, or you can disconnect it (if it will still idle ) to be able to check the idle drop per cylinder without the idle motor trying to intervene.
Check for vacuum leaks with a can of carb cleaner - Spray with the nozzle at suspected areas and if the engine ingests carb cleaner through a vacuum leak the engine speed will change! Sure you can use a smoke tester, but a can of carb cleaner is faster and cheaper.
Check for vacuum leaks with a can of carb cleaner - Spray with the nozzle at suspected areas and if the engine ingests carb cleaner through a vacuum leak the engine speed will change! Sure you can use a smoke tester, but a can of carb cleaner is faster and cheaper.
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