The plot thickens
After spraying some penetrant around all of my exhaust bolts and O2 sensors, I was feeling particularly inquisitive tonight. I decided to fire up the truck once more and poke around. It stumbled badly at first then roared to life (still no CEL). It actually ran decent for a bit, but then the popping came back (as expected).
As I was looking around and listening, something caught my eye:
One of the hoses had come off the DPFE sensor.
I reconnected the hose and watched for a bit. After a few popping sounds, it jumped back off. I put the hose back on again and went to try the next thing on my mind.
Up until now, I've only let the truck idle, but tonight I (maybe foolishly) tried giving it some throttle...boy did the popping pick up! It didn't so much pick up in frequency as it did intensity. These pops under slight load sounded much more violent. After hearing these louder pops, I feel confident in saying the noise is emanating from the driver's side rear area of the engine a.k.a right by the suspect cylinder #6.
At the risk of sounding dumb, I'm going to go ahead and say the sound seemed as if the combustion for cylinder #6 was sometimes happening
in the exhaust manifold, not in the combustion chamber. I'm really not an internal combustion expert, but something is telling me maybe the #6 exhaust valve is sticking partially open and the combustion is escaping (that would account for the blast that blew off the DPFE hose). Does this make any sense, oh wise Explorer enthusiasts?
Perhaps more importantly, what could be causing the valve to sometimes be sticking open? Would a few oily carbon chunks be enough to do it?