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  • Missfire at 5400-7500 rpm

    when wide open throttle i have the odd missfire between 5400-7500 rpm, whats the most likely cause... injectors? fuel pump? its a stock rb26 boost restrictor removed.
    1989 Gts-T Sold

    1992 GT-R Sold

    1991 Gts-T Sold

    1989 Gts-T Sold

    1992 GT-R What did i get myself into again...

  • #2
    Hi,

    Have you had a look at your spark plugs lately. Might be worth a shot to have a look at
    them, and to check the gaping while your there.

    Before you get into the expensive stuff.
    14 VW Jetta TDI
    05 Sentra SpecV - winter beater -
    95 240sx (RB25DET powered)
    95 240sx ( powered)
    89 GTR - Money Pit -

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    • #3
      i have no tools! im living with a billet family in america right now it sux haha
      1989 Gts-T Sold

      1992 GT-R Sold

      1991 Gts-T Sold

      1989 Gts-T Sold

      1992 GT-R What did i get myself into again...

      Comment


      • #4
        Probably coil packs, check spark plugs. In the US you can buy a socket set for like 40$ with everything you need. Go to Sears....

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        • #5
          I have the same issue and I know it's not the spark plugs. I've changed mine a couple times and all were gapped to 0.8. My guess is a MAF is acting up. I haven't had a chance to test it on mine but I will let you know when I do.
          N8er

          F*** Salt!

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          • #6
            I had this issue. Plugs. Another time it was 1 intermittent coil pack. Next time was another plug....
            Black 1991 GTR. Serious garage stand mantle/parts car.
            Black 1990 Pulsar GTiR. Sold
            Silver 1989 GTR. Sold
            Black 2010 Subaru WRX. Weekend warrior. Sold.
            Black 2013 F-150 FX4 ecoboost. Daily driver.
            White 2012 Ford Explorer Limited. Family wagon.

            Sorry for my offensive comments, I r socially retard.

            start by having A ROLLING GTR then we talk u ******* mofo funzy little *****
            lol

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            • #7
              Could be a few issues. Check you plugs as stated above the move to your coilpacks. It could be you fuel pump or even your turbos. Without tools it is really going to suck though. I would start with the cheapest thing first

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              • #8
                I'd say plugs too, followed by coils. We don't have anywhere near enough information to figure this out though.
                1992 GTR - 2.7L, GT2871R's, forged bottom end, big valves, 270* cams, R34 getrag
                2000 Honda Insight - 70+mpg daily driver
                2003 Sierra 2500HD Diesel - Tow vehicle

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                • #9
                  ya ill check the plugs when im home in 2 weeks
                  1989 Gts-T Sold

                  1992 GT-R Sold

                  1991 Gts-T Sold

                  1989 Gts-T Sold

                  1992 GT-R What did i get myself into again...

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Higher rpm miss = sparkplug gap or heat range is incorrect. NGK PFR6A and 1.1mm should be factory for RB26. Should be NGK PFR7A with 0.8mm gap with intake, exhaust mods and a bit of boost added on top. If it has missed at higher rpm, then it can damage at least 2x coilpacks (from experience they were next to each other) but the rest of the coilpacks are usually ok. Grey tracking marks under mounting bracket on both sides tells you coilpack is leaking. Some dip in resin or use high temp silicon to fill the cracks on both sides, so coilpack stops leaking (temp fix).

                    I would pull the sparkplugs and read the tips. Then make decision on what engine needs. Heat range of sparkplugs can change due to cylinder temps changing. Leaning engine out via raising boost level can raise cylinder temps. If too hot with heat range, can melt the tip and widen the gap (from experience with running too hot sparkplug). If too cold, I think can blacken the tip. Should change heatrange every 75-100hp or if engine is running leaner (colder heatrange) or richer (hotter heatrange).

                    NGK website helps you with reading sparkplug tips and has photo's of what it looks like -



                    Also helps you to understand heat ranges -



                    Other interesting things to read about sparkplugs -

                    Last edited by Skym; 03-10-2011, 06:15 AM.
                    RESPONSE MONSTER

                    The most epic signature ever "epic".

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                    • #11
                      Check Coilpacks and MAFs before changing sparkplugs.. very comon problem on skylines.

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                      • #12
                        ^ ?

                        Plugs are cheap it should always be the first thing you check. He should start by regapping his plugs. Then if that doesn't work move down to coilpacks, etc.

                        Plus the high RPM missfire is a 99% probability of a plug gap issue.
                        Last edited by DarkCaporaL; 03-09-2011, 09:46 AM.
                        R32 GTR FULL SERVICE MANUAL DOWNLOAD:
                        http://forums.gtrcanada.com/faq/36-holy-bible-6.html#post467565

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                        • #13
                          So someone with 1.4 bar should run what? heat range 7 with .8mm gap?
                          Black 1991 GTR. Serious garage stand mantle/parts car.
                          Black 1990 Pulsar GTiR. Sold
                          Silver 1989 GTR. Sold
                          Black 2010 Subaru WRX. Weekend warrior. Sold.
                          Black 2013 F-150 FX4 ecoboost. Daily driver.
                          White 2012 Ford Explorer Limited. Family wagon.

                          Sorry for my offensive comments, I r socially retard.

                          start by having A ROLLING GTR then we talk u ******* mofo funzy little *****
                          lol

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Look at hp level from stock (around 311hp stock for R32GTR, not 280hp). Every 75-100hp go one heat range colder. Then fine tune heatrange via reading tips with hotter if you run engine rich or colder if you run engine leaner.

                            Also environment plays a role, as colder environment = engine runs richer on warmup tables, so hotter sparkplug is used.
                            Last edited by Skym; 03-10-2011, 06:32 AM.
                            RESPONSE MONSTER

                            The most epic signature ever "epic".

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