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cylinder 1 misfiring during warm-up

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by Joey Goncalves, Nov 29, 2012.

  1. Joey Goncalves

    Joey Goncalves Junior Member

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    Summary:
    Tried:
    >Moisture in number 1 igniter hole
    (igniter was dry when I checked this morning)
    >Faulty igniter.
    (-switched #1, and #2 igniter coil. Did not help )
    >MAF clean (CRC product)
    (removed MAF and spray cleaned it with MAF cleaner and reinstalled. Did not help)
    >Throttle body clean (CRC product)
    (Did not help)
    >Ohmed out the injectors.
    (all injectors have same resistance)


    Todo:
    -switch #1, and #2 spark plug ( dealer has done this)
    -does it make sense to switch the injector? Is there a procedure somewhere?(letting dealer do one more diagnostic this week)

     
  2. PriusGuy32

    PriusGuy32 Prius Driver Extraordinaire

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    I wonder if you should have a compression test performed on the engine or at least the #1 cylinder. It could be a burnt valve or some other mechanical issue.
     
  3. Britprius

    Britprius Senior Member

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    This would be unlikely to only give problems at warm up.
     
  4. PriusGuy32

    PriusGuy32 Prius Driver Extraordinaire

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    Yeah good point, I had forgotten about that.
     
  5. Joey Goncalves

    Joey Goncalves Junior Member

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    The dealer did do a compression test. At this point I am kind of at a loss for ideas. Here it is what has been done so far:
    None have helped:

    Dealer:
    "swapped plug to #2"
    "swapped coil to #4"
    "performed compression test. OK"

    Me:
    >check for Moisture in number 1 igniter hole (igniter was dry when I checked this morning)
    >check for Faulty igniter (-switched #1, and #2 igniter coil. Did not help )
    >MAF clean (CRC product)(removed MAF and spray cleaned it with MAF cleaner and reinstalled. Did not help)
    >Throttle body clean (CRC product)(Did not help)
    >Ohmed out the injectors(all injectors have same resistance)

    So thinking about:
    1)Faulty injector(clogged, intermittently clogged?? but no misfire going up hill with good throttle on it. Several times now)
    2)Wiring (I think it would be more persistent)
    3)Have seen posting on the Internet about intake manifold leak ( rough idle warm-up)
    4)Dealership/Toyota suggestion: fuel rail (??)
     
  6. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    I suggest you ask your dealer service advisor how replacing the fuel rail will help if the problem is only with one cylinder and only when the engine is cold.

    I would expect an intake manifold leak to result in a lean fuel mixture that impacts more than one cylinder.
     
  7. Joey Goncalves

    Joey Goncalves Junior Member

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    I read my data from the on-board diagnostic. And refresh the read periodically during the drive.

    The car goes back to the dealer on Wednesday for another shot. If they don't diagnose it this time around. I will take it to another set of eyes. $1400 is a little rich for a "maybe" solution on a fairly new 2009.

    Here is a log of my daily commutes. Note at the end of the trip each way I have a good ~1 min uphill, where I have to give good throttle at (one city speed, one highway speed). Rarely ever misfires there(engine is good an warm by then also).

    misfires:(these are approximate rounded off numbers)
    the other cylinders, 2,3,4 have the odd very rare misfire. Maybe 1 or 2 misfires(<5) across the board on a 45 min commute

    Date | 10 min | 20 min | 30 min | total
    +-------------+-------+--------+-------+-------------
    nov 29pm | 630 | 100 | <10 | 740
    +-------------+-------+--------+-------+-------------
    nov 30am | 1100 | 100 | <10 | 1210
    +-------------+-------+--------+-------+-------------
    nov 30pm | 900 | 100 | <10 | 1110
    +-------------+-------+--------+-------+-------------
    dec 01 am | 1000 | 100 | <10 | 1110
    +-------------+-------+--------+-------+-------------
    dec 03 am | 1000 | 100 | <10 | 1110


    This post has my attention:
    Capturing atmosphere in today's vehicles - Keeping the air moving through intake manifolds keeps your customers rolling. - Spectroscopy

    "Then there was the Toyota with a misfire on number one cylinder. A brief shot of carb spray at the front runner smoothed the skip and a smoke test revealed the problem for what it was. The paper gasket had failed and had opened up a channel for outside air to come in."

    What happens if the rubber seal on the injector is letting air in?



    Regards
    Joey
     
  8. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    OK, I can now see that the point of removing and replacing the fuel rail would be so that you can change the fuel injector O-rings. That is a reasonable thing to try, although if you are going to that trouble I would also replace cyl 1 injector while you are at it.

    It sounds like you are able to DIY which would save you all except $100 of the $1,400 quoted repair price. I estimate the replacement injector, valve cover gasket and injector O-rings might cost you $100+.

    If you can get the car to misfire while it is sitting in your driveway, why not invoke inspection mode, then try spraying the #1 injector body with throttle body cleaner to see what happens. If the misfire goes away then that would be a clue that the O-ring is leaking when cold.
     
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  9. Joey Goncalves

    Joey Goncalves Junior Member

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    Is there a test I can do to test if the o-ring is failing? Cold engine(rubber contracts), air gets in. Warm engine, (rubber expands) and acts like a seal(misfire goes away)? (shoot carb spray at it? won't that hurt the o-ring in the long run? )

    This guy is using brake cleaner? less harmful to the rubber?


    PS: If I go through the trouble of re/re the rail. Should I replace all the injectors to be future safe?

    From Toyota in Canada they are close to $200 a pop.



    Thanks
    Joey
     
  10. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    Hmm, if you are concerned about causing damage to the rubber, perhaps isopropyl alcohol (aka rubbing alcohol) might be suitable. Brake parts cleaner is quite strong, I don't know whether that is suitable for this particular purpose.

    Since the injectors are so expensive and you aren't having a problem with the ones installed at cyls 2 - 4 I would leave those alone.
     
    Joey Goncalves likes this.
  11. Joey Goncalves

    Joey Goncalves Junior Member

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    K,

    I will pick up some carb cleaner on the way home. I went through the can of throttle body cleaner(small can instructions said to use it all). I have some of the MAF cleaner left over. Will that work?
     
  12. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    MAF cleaner should be OK since it won't erode the plastic body of the MAF sensor.
     
  13. Joey Goncalves

    Joey Goncalves Junior Member

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    Looks like we might have something. I will get the Dealership to look into it on after I drop it off Wednesday.

    (Note: this is a warm engine after getting home)
    MAF in the injector well:
    -evaporates quickly so effect does not last long at all.
    -appears to raise the Max RPM reading by about +20 RPM.

    Brake cleaner in the injector well:
    -does not evaporate quickly.
    -appears to seep through and causes the the exhaust to come out like smoke. Clear the garage smoke and fumes.

    Regards
    Joey
     
  14. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    Yes, it looks like the injector O-ring has a leak given your latest findings.
     
  15. Joey Goncalves

    Joey Goncalves Junior Member

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    That is a nice doc. Just did a quick scan but will read a little more comprehensively tonight
     
  16. maestro8

    maestro8 Nouveau Member

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    A proper fuel injector cleaning involves placing the injectors in an ultrasonic bath. Passing a small amount of cleaner through them isn't going to achieve as good a cleaning.

    There are rubber seals surrounding the brake piston... brake parts cleaner is just fine for this purpose. Just be careful of overspray on any painted surfaces.
     
  17. Joey Goncalves

    Joey Goncalves Junior Member

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    The car is still at the dealership. They have replaced the injector seals, but are still seeing some ( a lot less misfires ). They are not sure if this is normal or not for a 2009 Prius. Does anyone have a nicely running Prius that has recently tracked misfires from warm-up and misfires after warm? Should there be any?

    Regards
    Joey
     
  18. usnavystgc

    usnavystgc Die Hard DIYer and Ebike enthusiast.

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    A properly running engine should produce "no" misfires.
     
  19. Joey Goncalves

    Joey Goncalves Junior Member

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    The Dealership informed me that they also tried swapping the injector. Also did not fix the issue. I got the car back this afternoon. Still shows misfires on cylinder #1. They took some logs from the car and want to analyze them then will call me back in. Hope they find it.

    They have a fancy scanner. Shows the misfires in real-time. In my software I have to do a manual refresh. We could see the misfire increment in real-time, take a break and then increment again.

    This link in VW forums seems to have the same symptoms. Points to a cylinder head failure. No closure yet on the thread. So Don't know for sure:
    VWVortex.com - Cylinder 1 misfire when cold, once warmed up it goes away (AWP)
     
  20. Joey Goncalves

    Joey Goncalves Junior Member

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