N3EAQ
New Member
- Joined
- September 4, 2010
- Messages
- 3
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- Charles Town, WV
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 1997 XLT
Hello All!
Maybe someone here can help, I'm out of ideas! I have a 97 Explorer XLT w/ about 65K miles on it.
About a year ago I started to notice that when I was sitting at idle (at lights or in traffic), especially if the headlights and/or the heater/AC blower was running, the volt meter would show very low voltage, or a non-charging condition. Around the same time I started to notice a serious misfire when I would put the SUV under load. E.g., pulling a steep hill, having a load in the back and accelerating, giving it hard pedal to pull out from a ramp or stop sign, etc..
I attempted to repair these conditions myself with the following actions, I replaced the:
Plugs,
Wires,
Coil pack,
Air Filter,
Fuel Filter,
Battery,
Alternator,
Serpentine Belt,
The above seemed to solve the issue of the misfire during the cool weather months, however I did feel that the SUV didn’t have the power it had before. Also, the low voltage/charge at idle was NOT solved. As soon as warm weather came back this year, so did the misfire!
Using my analyzer on the OBD II port all I ever read is P0303/P0305 (misfire cyl 3 & 5) which has not helped much in tracking down a solid cause. Not sure why it’s always these and only these cyl. Reporting the misfire, and never any other helpful codes!
Only seems to throw codes/miss fire when the engine is warmed up and has been running a while, let's say after about 20 miles/minutes, i.e., after the engine is good and warmed up.
I've thought about it and the MAF and O2 sensors don't make sense, or it would be more than just cyl 3 & 5, same goes for a fuel pump/pressure issue.
The wires for cyl 3 & 5 are not next to each other, so they can't be cross-sparking, these cyl. aren't next to each other physically on the engine, so it's not a gasket/valve issue.
They ARE next to each other in the firing sequence, so that may be some clue, but to what, I don't know!
IDEAS???????
Mike - Email me direct at n3eaq@n3eaq.net
Maybe someone here can help, I'm out of ideas! I have a 97 Explorer XLT w/ about 65K miles on it.
About a year ago I started to notice that when I was sitting at idle (at lights or in traffic), especially if the headlights and/or the heater/AC blower was running, the volt meter would show very low voltage, or a non-charging condition. Around the same time I started to notice a serious misfire when I would put the SUV under load. E.g., pulling a steep hill, having a load in the back and accelerating, giving it hard pedal to pull out from a ramp or stop sign, etc..
I attempted to repair these conditions myself with the following actions, I replaced the:
Plugs,
Wires,
Coil pack,
Air Filter,
Fuel Filter,
Battery,
Alternator,
Serpentine Belt,
The above seemed to solve the issue of the misfire during the cool weather months, however I did feel that the SUV didn’t have the power it had before. Also, the low voltage/charge at idle was NOT solved. As soon as warm weather came back this year, so did the misfire!
Using my analyzer on the OBD II port all I ever read is P0303/P0305 (misfire cyl 3 & 5) which has not helped much in tracking down a solid cause. Not sure why it’s always these and only these cyl. Reporting the misfire, and never any other helpful codes!
Only seems to throw codes/miss fire when the engine is warmed up and has been running a while, let's say after about 20 miles/minutes, i.e., after the engine is good and warmed up.
I've thought about it and the MAF and O2 sensors don't make sense, or it would be more than just cyl 3 & 5, same goes for a fuel pump/pressure issue.
The wires for cyl 3 & 5 are not next to each other, so they can't be cross-sparking, these cyl. aren't next to each other physically on the engine, so it's not a gasket/valve issue.
They ARE next to each other in the firing sequence, so that may be some clue, but to what, I don't know!
IDEAS???????
Mike - Email me direct at n3eaq@n3eaq.net