I'm chasing a weird misfire on my 2018 Tahoe with the L83/5.3 with 125k miles.
It started off with a failed coilpack that I was able to diagnose from a misfire code, swapping coil packs and checking misfire counts on an ODB reader. The failed coil pack was producing hundreds/thousands of misfires and very rough running, but after replacing the coil pack it was back running smooth again.
I did notice that there was still a much lower number of misfires on cylinder 8 still, probably in the region of 10-30 counts but it wasn't noticeable in the cabin and not enough to throw a code.
Since I was about to go on a 6k road trip I ended up replacing all 8 coil packs, replaced all spark plugs and wires as they were probably due anyway, and also went down a rabbit hole of checking fuel trims which I suspected leaky injectors and ended up replacing all 8 injectors and the fuel rails as they bent when I pulled them.
When I pulled the number 8 injector it was very black and looked like a bunch of carbon deposits on there compared to others so suggests this cylinder might have been running slightly rough for a while (see attached showing injectors 6 and 8).
Next noticed that cleaning the MAF seemed to improve the misfire counts and ended up replacing the MAF with a brand new AC Delco which seemed to fix the issue for a short while and thought we were good.
Sometime after that it slowly started to return, can't recall exactly but now after a 6k mile road trip, I have the following symptoms:
Reading misfire counts when running, I can see that on cold start there are a random misfires on cylinders 1-7 with counts between 1 and 4, but cylinder 8 is the worst and will see misfire counts up to 20ish.
Once running and warm, there are no misfires EXCEPT on cylinder 8, and this only occurs consistently when letting off the gas pedal or sometimes slowing down at light and the count is almost always 2, but sometimes 4 or 6. The misfire doesn't happen with the throttle open at all, only seems to occur when you snap the throttle closed after being open a decent amount e.g. on the highway when you lift.
Seemed like a vacuum leak to me, vacuum should be highest when the throttle is closed after being open. I smoke tested, replaced intake gaskets and throttle gaskets and no change.
Thought it might be a warped or cracked intake manifold, so replaced that with a new OEM part, torqued the intake bolts on a cold engine, first run showed absolutely ZERO misfires across the board and ran perfect. Thought that had fixed it for good but after that first heat cycle the misfires returned exactly as before and the bolts needed re-torquing again.
In total so far I have:
Replaced all coil packs
Replaced all spark plugs and wires
Replaced all injectors and fuel rails
Replaced intake gaskets
Replaced throttle body gasket and cleaned throttle body
Replaced entire plastic intake manifold
New AC Delco MAF sensor
Cleaned MAP sensor
Smoke tested via intake, didn't find any obvious leaks
I've been running a Range AFM disable device since about 104k miles when I got the truck
The fact the first run on a fresh intake manifold showed no misfires and replacing/cleaning the MAF seemed to temporarily improve things kept leading me to thinking this is a vacuum leak. I tried re-seating and re-torquing manifold with aviation gasket sealer on the metal surfaces as they looked a bit beat up in places but no change there either. Thought could be some minor vacuum leak that closes up when the engine bay is warm and expanded, but maybe the cold start misfires and cylinder 8 misfire are unrelated, although the 8 misfire is bad on cold start too.
1. Is it normal to see a bunch of random misfires until the engine warms up? Was thinking it could be to do with a plastic intake on an aluminum manifold and they're both heating up differently or plastic intake warps after some heat cycles, but silicone intake gasket should account for that
2. What's up with the minor misfire on cylinder 8 on throttle lift? Not sure where to go from here diagnosing this - could that be some worn cam/lifter/engine issue etc, although it's weird it only happens when lifting the throttle. Possible engine issue, vacuum leak somewhere else?
I'm new to GMs and truck motors, maybe this is normal and not worth worrying about but I'd like to see 0 misfires and get it running perfect
It started off with a failed coilpack that I was able to diagnose from a misfire code, swapping coil packs and checking misfire counts on an ODB reader. The failed coil pack was producing hundreds/thousands of misfires and very rough running, but after replacing the coil pack it was back running smooth again.
I did notice that there was still a much lower number of misfires on cylinder 8 still, probably in the region of 10-30 counts but it wasn't noticeable in the cabin and not enough to throw a code.
Since I was about to go on a 6k road trip I ended up replacing all 8 coil packs, replaced all spark plugs and wires as they were probably due anyway, and also went down a rabbit hole of checking fuel trims which I suspected leaky injectors and ended up replacing all 8 injectors and the fuel rails as they bent when I pulled them.
When I pulled the number 8 injector it was very black and looked like a bunch of carbon deposits on there compared to others so suggests this cylinder might have been running slightly rough for a while (see attached showing injectors 6 and 8).
Next noticed that cleaning the MAF seemed to improve the misfire counts and ended up replacing the MAF with a brand new AC Delco which seemed to fix the issue for a short while and thought we were good.
Sometime after that it slowly started to return, can't recall exactly but now after a 6k mile road trip, I have the following symptoms:
Reading misfire counts when running, I can see that on cold start there are a random misfires on cylinders 1-7 with counts between 1 and 4, but cylinder 8 is the worst and will see misfire counts up to 20ish.
Once running and warm, there are no misfires EXCEPT on cylinder 8, and this only occurs consistently when letting off the gas pedal or sometimes slowing down at light and the count is almost always 2, but sometimes 4 or 6. The misfire doesn't happen with the throttle open at all, only seems to occur when you snap the throttle closed after being open a decent amount e.g. on the highway when you lift.
Seemed like a vacuum leak to me, vacuum should be highest when the throttle is closed after being open. I smoke tested, replaced intake gaskets and throttle gaskets and no change.
Thought it might be a warped or cracked intake manifold, so replaced that with a new OEM part, torqued the intake bolts on a cold engine, first run showed absolutely ZERO misfires across the board and ran perfect. Thought that had fixed it for good but after that first heat cycle the misfires returned exactly as before and the bolts needed re-torquing again.
In total so far I have:
Replaced all coil packs
Replaced all spark plugs and wires
Replaced all injectors and fuel rails
Replaced intake gaskets
Replaced throttle body gasket and cleaned throttle body
Replaced entire plastic intake manifold
New AC Delco MAF sensor
Cleaned MAP sensor
Smoke tested via intake, didn't find any obvious leaks
I've been running a Range AFM disable device since about 104k miles when I got the truck
The fact the first run on a fresh intake manifold showed no misfires and replacing/cleaning the MAF seemed to temporarily improve things kept leading me to thinking this is a vacuum leak. I tried re-seating and re-torquing manifold with aviation gasket sealer on the metal surfaces as they looked a bit beat up in places but no change there either. Thought could be some minor vacuum leak that closes up when the engine bay is warm and expanded, but maybe the cold start misfires and cylinder 8 misfire are unrelated, although the 8 misfire is bad on cold start too.
1. Is it normal to see a bunch of random misfires until the engine warms up? Was thinking it could be to do with a plastic intake on an aluminum manifold and they're both heating up differently or plastic intake warps after some heat cycles, but silicone intake gasket should account for that
2. What's up with the minor misfire on cylinder 8 on throttle lift? Not sure where to go from here diagnosing this - could that be some worn cam/lifter/engine issue etc, although it's weird it only happens when lifting the throttle. Possible engine issue, vacuum leak somewhere else?
I'm new to GMs and truck motors, maybe this is normal and not worth worrying about but I'd like to see 0 misfires and get it running perfect
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