Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst 123 LastLast
Results 11 to 20 of 21

Thread: V8 Breathing Heavily and Misfire on LPG

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    Outer Sydney
    Posts
    479
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by Roverlord off road spares View Post
    I noticed you also said your coil was replaced, was it aftermarket ? we had a lot of trouble with aftermarket coils years ago so we only sell the lucas ones now . If you have another coil try a swap and see if the problem goes away.
    An ex-land rover mechanic told me the same thing once. He recommended I use a Bosch GT40 coil without a resistor. It has now done 45,000 km. When trying to isolate this misfire i connected my old (but working) Lucas coil with resistor. I works fine as well.

    Edward

  2. #12
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    Outer Sydney
    Posts
    479
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by PLR View Post
    G`day Edward ,

    for the miss you need to try to narrow it down to a cylinder , when it misses spend some time removing plug leads and see if you can locate it , if it`s that type of thing .

    To me is still seems like two problems or maybe three problems .

    The lower comp of #2 maybe valve .
    The crankcase pressure may be firetraps etc .
    The miss may be ignition .

    The oil staying clean tells you that the combustion gasses are mostly going where they should , out of the engine and not into the crankcase .

    So the flame traps etc would be worth a look .

    The colour of the plugs is a good tell also but i`d suggest you look at them closely for anything not uniform .

    I found a recent carb diaphragm failure by looking at new plugs with less than 200km on them burning lpg , four of the plugs were a very slightly whiter colour on the insulator and these plugs mated to the cylinders the left hand carb feeds .

    Compression tests done cold relate .

    Compression tests are normally done when the engine is at running or near temp because that is where it is mostly used and the tolerances are where they should be best .

    Adding oil to a cylinder if cold or hot when compression testing is mostly helping to seal the compression ring .

    If a large increase in either case is seen on the gauge the condition of the compression ring comes into question .

    I`d suggest you do a hot compression test on all cylinders and a without and with oil on cylinder #2 .

    If you get the same or similar outcome as with the cold test you have done then it is pointing to a valve problem .

    This however may have nothing to do with the miss .

    The norm would be for the exhaust valve to be the one to look at and for carbon to build up on the seat and back of the valve which causes the valve to not seal as it should .

    Or the carbon builds up inside the valve guide which impedes the valve stem movement which also causes the valve to not seal as it should .

    I have a fitting which screws into the sparkplug hole and used with an air compressor it can be used to hold valves closed if there is reason to remove valve springs without removing the head and it will also allow the loss of air to be heard if a valve is leaking etc .

    Generally valve problems will be either constant or worsen when the engine warms up .

    Your is not acting this way so it seems to me that an ignition fault for the miss is still possible .

    Making all these different suggestions may not seem overly helpful but until you are able to narrow some things down the correct direction is awkward to find .
    Thank you PLR. I'll start checking these things first thing in the morning, including the flame traps. I will start pulling the leads off one a time. The Landy does not really miss at idle, it's only when i apply load. So i guess i'll start disconnecting leads (starting with cylinder 2) on my way to work tomorrow and see if i can isolate which cylinder is the problem.

    Regarding a possible valve issue, the miss is very intermittent, and certainly not regular (like i would imagine a valve miss to be like). The needle on the vacuum gauge also does not indicate a valve issue.

    Edward

  3. #13
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    Outer Sydney
    Posts
    479
    Total Downloaded
    0
    I pulled plug lead 2 off this morning. The Landy felt smooth (well, you know what i mean - didn't do its usual miss). Put the lead back on expecting it to start missing again, but it was perfectly smooth all the way to work. I'll keep chasing...

  4. #14
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    3960
    Posts
    1,161
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by I Love My Landy! View Post
    I pulled plug lead 2 off this morning. The Landy felt smooth (well, you know what i mean - didn't do its usual miss). Put the lead back on expecting it to start missing again, but it was perfectly smooth all the way to work. I'll keep chasing...

    Is it a fighting type miss , one that can be felt like a stutter or hiccup type thing not a miss your just aware of one that tells you it`s there ?

    I understand that`s a hard question to answer but if it`s doing anything like i ask i think you`ll understand .
    Last edited by PLR; 22nd May 2017 at 10:29 PM. Reason: Try to clarify

  5. #15
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    3960
    Posts
    1,161
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Excuse me if you will Edward , if i`m asked something i think it good manners to answer .


    Quote Originally Posted by PLR View Post

    I wouldn`t remove the push rods as suggested unless you take the inlet manifold off first or are prepared to do so .

    Quote Originally Posted by Sitec View Post
    Just curious as to why you say that...

    If the compression is leaking into the valley , in many circumstances the inlet gasket can be seen to breath , go up and down with the leak . If not seen to move they will often crumple out of shape or distort and nothing really needs to be dismantled to be aware of it .

    The fact that only a little of the ball end of the pushrod can be held and positioned makes it an awkward job and i wouldn`t suggest removing the pushrods with out warning of dropping and maybe having to remove the inlet manifold .

    I agree the lifters most likely won`t come all the way out with the pushrod partly because in a worn engine the lifters will possibly be mushroomed and if not a twist with angle will normally dislodge the pushrod but this same twist or holding the pushrod needs to be done when removing the arms so they don`t lift and drop the pushrod .

  6. #16
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    Outer Sydney
    Posts
    479
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by PLR View Post
    Is it a fighting type miss , one that can be felt like a stutter or hiccup type thing not a miss your just aware of one that tells you it`s there ?

    I understand that`s a hard question to answer but if it`s doing anything like i ask i think you`ll understand .
    I think i know what you mean. The miss is like an intermittent hiccup or stutter. Id say of a morning it will stutter up to 10 - 12 times randomly within a minute (it gets better as the engine warms up). It is not a regular type miss/lope. The miss feels 'electrical' to me, or possibly vacuum related. In fact i have just blocked the vacuum line to the diff lock in case there is a leak in the hose near the gearbox that i cannot see. I'll see how it goes.

    I also pulled the lead off cylinder 2 again this morning, and it did it's usual miss. Good news i thought - the miss may not be related to the low compression of that cylinder. I will keep trying to isolate the problem cylinder over the next few days.

    I also checked the flame traps - all clear.

    Thank you,

    Edward

  7. #17
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Crafers West South Australia
    Posts
    11,732
    Total Downloaded
    0
    What colour is no.2 plug compared to the others? A bit of coolant could be seeping in via a weak head gasket. Shim steel head gaskets can leak a bit without catastrophic failure.

  8. #18
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    3960
    Posts
    1,161
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by I Love My Landy! View Post
    I think i know what you mean. The miss is like an intermittent hiccup or stutter. Id say of a morning it will stutter up to 10 - 12 times randomly within a minute (it gets better as the engine warms up). It is not a regular type miss/lope. The miss feels 'electrical' to me, or possibly vacuum related. In fact i have just blocked the vacuum line to the diff lock in case there is a leak in the hose near the gearbox that i cannot see. I'll see how it goes.

    I also pulled the lead off cylinder 2 again this morning, and it did it's usual miss. Good news i thought - the miss may not be related to the low compression of that cylinder. I will keep trying to isolate the problem cylinder over the next few days.

    I also checked the flame traps - all clear.

    Thank you,

    Edward
    G`day Edward ,

    it should have a filter for the crankcase breather .

    The pipe connects on the right side high at the back of the engine block above the bell housing , it`s just an open T that only uses the L part of the T , if you didn`t know it was there it would be hard to find , EFI engines don`t use it .

    If yours has a charcoal canister the filter will be on the center pipe , if not it will be on that pipe that comes from the back of the engine which is right at the corner of and between the engine and firewall .

    All that to get to , i`d suggest because you`ve found the traps are clear that it would be the next thing to check for the crankcase pressure .


    The miss as i described could be a crossfire not one where the cylinder is back firing to the extent of a noise but one where it is causing a spark at the wrong time in the wrong cylinder and the firing is causing the miss .

    I have had this sort of thing after fitting new plug leads , i had only fitted new leads as a precautionary measure the engine was running fine .

    It would stumble hiccup when moving off , sometimes or not there was no knowing when or if .

    It could drive for 100km and do nothing or it could drive for 10km and stumble at some point like up a hill and then another 60 km and be fine .

    The plug leads were the only thing that had changed so i put an ohm meter on them all and they checked out .

    I then pulled on each lead in turn and one broken in two pieces , by replacing this one lead everything was good again .

    I learn`t this about wires over fourty years ago when i did an apprenticeship mostly working on motorcycles and tractors a good one you can pull on and do no harm a bad one will come apart or stretch .

    The break inside the lead allowed the cylinder to run ok but sometimes under load it would leak across to another lead and cause that cylinder to fire when unwanted but it was only sometimes and not consistent.

    Eventually that lead would have leaked all the time and been easily found but as with yours it is a bit hard to put up with for too long .

    I would imagine you have your leads spaced as much as possible though some generally have to come pretty close if not touch .

  9. #19
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Safety Bay
    Posts
    8,041
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by Roverlord off road spares View Post
    I noticed you also said your coil was replaced, was it aftermarket ? we had a lot of trouble with aftermarket coils years ago so we only sell the lucas ones now . If you have another coil try a swap and see if the problem goes away.
    Same here,fitted a non Lucas because Lucas are crap and the thing ran like a dog,fitted a second hand Lucas and it ran like a dream.I also had a brand new set of leads fitted that had a buggered coil lead,I only found out after pulling it out changing the coil and the end came off.LPG likes compression and a strong spark. Pat

  10. #20
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    Outer Sydney
    Posts
    479
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by bee utey View Post
    What colour is no.2 plug compared to the others? A bit of coolant could be seeping in via a weak head gasket. Shim steel head gaskets can leak a bit without catastrophic failure.
    Thanks bee utey. I'll have a look when i get a chance. I use composite head gaskets though.

    Edward

Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst 123 LastLast

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Search AULRO.com ONLY!
Search All the Web!