jfrabat
New member
Here's the deal; I have been chasing this problem for over a year with no solution as of yet, and I am running out of ideas.
THE PROBLEM: when I am driving the Jeep, it sometimes (no particular situation triggers it except that it happens under load, like when accelerating), the Jeep simply starts cutting out. The best way to describe it is to imagine as if there is a bad connection to the coil which makes it cut out sporadically. If you give it gas, there will be some detonation (probably the unspent fuel reaching the exhaust manifold). I should probably point out that the Jeep would also toast coils on a regular basis, but I checked current levels, and it's showing fine. I also relocated the coil to the firewall to rule out heat as the cause.
Here's a list of parts that have been replaced and are no longer in question as the source of this never ending problem:
From the fuel side:
Fuel sending unit (includes pump)
Fuel Filter
Fuel injectors
Fuel Pressure Regulator
Replaced some cracked fuel hoses (both at the filter and on top of the tank)
Charcoal canister
FPR
Ignition:
Rotor
Cap
Wires
Coil
Plugs
Computer:
ECU (I had another one as a backup)
TPS (was faulty anyway)
IAC (had some idle issues)
CPS
Cam Position Sensor (AKA Distributor Sensor)
IAT
MAP
Oil Pressure Sensor (was also acting up)
ASD Relay
O2 Sensor
Vacuum:
Replaced all the engine bay vacuum hoses with silicone hoses and made sure there are no leaks
I also checked the plug on the ECU, and there is no corrosion whatsoever. There is also no cat on my Jeep, so it's not the cat. Air filter was recently cleaned out (along with the whole TB) and oiled (Fram AirHog).
When it fails, I get a code 52 (Sustained rich air/fuel ratio condition detected in O2 sensor bank 1 position 1), which leads me to believe that the problem is on the ignition side. Besides, if I give it gas while it's acting up, it starts detonating heavily (kind of like a backfire, but, like I said, I think it is the unburnt fuel hitting the exhaust manifold).
TOnly things left that I have not checked is engine harness and Ignition Switch (but considering it sputters, and everything else continues to work, even the stereo, I doubt it is the ignition switch). So any idea as to what could be causing this?
Felipe
THE PROBLEM: when I am driving the Jeep, it sometimes (no particular situation triggers it except that it happens under load, like when accelerating), the Jeep simply starts cutting out. The best way to describe it is to imagine as if there is a bad connection to the coil which makes it cut out sporadically. If you give it gas, there will be some detonation (probably the unspent fuel reaching the exhaust manifold). I should probably point out that the Jeep would also toast coils on a regular basis, but I checked current levels, and it's showing fine. I also relocated the coil to the firewall to rule out heat as the cause.
Here's a list of parts that have been replaced and are no longer in question as the source of this never ending problem:
From the fuel side:
Fuel sending unit (includes pump)
Fuel Filter
Fuel injectors
Fuel Pressure Regulator
Replaced some cracked fuel hoses (both at the filter and on top of the tank)
Charcoal canister
FPR
Ignition:
Rotor
Cap
Wires
Coil
Plugs
Computer:
ECU (I had another one as a backup)
TPS (was faulty anyway)
IAC (had some idle issues)
CPS
Cam Position Sensor (AKA Distributor Sensor)
IAT
MAP
Oil Pressure Sensor (was also acting up)
ASD Relay
O2 Sensor
Vacuum:
Replaced all the engine bay vacuum hoses with silicone hoses and made sure there are no leaks
I also checked the plug on the ECU, and there is no corrosion whatsoever. There is also no cat on my Jeep, so it's not the cat. Air filter was recently cleaned out (along with the whole TB) and oiled (Fram AirHog).
When it fails, I get a code 52 (Sustained rich air/fuel ratio condition detected in O2 sensor bank 1 position 1), which leads me to believe that the problem is on the ignition side. Besides, if I give it gas while it's acting up, it starts detonating heavily (kind of like a backfire, but, like I said, I think it is the unburnt fuel hitting the exhaust manifold).
TOnly things left that I have not checked is engine harness and Ignition Switch (but considering it sputters, and everything else continues to work, even the stereo, I doubt it is the ignition switch). So any idea as to what could be causing this?
Felipe