Thats the punchline of an old joke about Thermos bottles.
What I am trying to figure out is different.
Got a friend with a Lincoln Town Car. He has been getting an intermittent skip, so he borrowed my code reader.
It reported an intermittent misfire on No. 5 Cylinder.
Now there is a test procedure for some Fords, that will find a dead cylinder. You put the computer into test mode, and it sets a constant engine speed, then turns off the fuel injectors one at a time and looks for an RPM drop.
If it does not see a drop, that means that its a dead hole.
If it has individual coils, it turns them off on at a time.
Fine, I get that. I have run that test, and its obvious that its running the test.
What I want to know, is how it detects a misfire on a cylinder while driving down the road?
It doesn't have an oxygen sensor in each exhaust port, so it cannot see a rich or lean condition.
If it uses sequential injection, and/or individual ignition coils, it knows when each cylinder fires, but is it quick enough to detect a momentary loss of power at speed?
Or does it only check when doing a hard acceleration? Driving down the road at cruise, its hard for me to feel a skip, but when I am pulling away from a light or passing a car, it obvious.
What I am trying to figure out is different.
Got a friend with a Lincoln Town Car. He has been getting an intermittent skip, so he borrowed my code reader.
It reported an intermittent misfire on No. 5 Cylinder.
Now there is a test procedure for some Fords, that will find a dead cylinder. You put the computer into test mode, and it sets a constant engine speed, then turns off the fuel injectors one at a time and looks for an RPM drop.
If it does not see a drop, that means that its a dead hole.
If it has individual coils, it turns them off on at a time.
Fine, I get that. I have run that test, and its obvious that its running the test.
What I want to know, is how it detects a misfire on a cylinder while driving down the road?
It doesn't have an oxygen sensor in each exhaust port, so it cannot see a rich or lean condition.
If it uses sequential injection, and/or individual ignition coils, it knows when each cylinder fires, but is it quick enough to detect a momentary loss of power at speed?
Or does it only check when doing a hard acceleration? Driving down the road at cruise, its hard for me to feel a skip, but when I am pulling away from a light or passing a car, it obvious.



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