vrdynotuning
New Member
Hi guys been looking around on the forum when I was trying to find a solution to a missfire that affected all cylinders around 2000 rpm on a TD4 freelander. Vehicle concerned is a 2005 td4 auto at 82000 miles. Was very bad white/blue smoke while driving and a jusddering like driving on concreate roads. On a smooth surface. 60mph toeing on motorway was horrific lack of power causing irratic gear change due to power loss on auto gearbox.
Obviously being a workshop I have access to lots of diagnostics equipment including snap on and Hawkeye. Leak back testers snap on scope for electrical testing vac testers and smoke testers. All of this however was rather irelivent in this case as the vehicle had no fault codes apart from a fuel preshure code for delivery fuel preshure which was solved by replacing the lift pump ( fuel filter also changed at same time.)
Vehicle also suffered from a bad connection to the rail preshure sensor. Which both the sensor and loom were replaced. Also fitted was a Bosch maf a new boost solonoid and full service items. Compression was around 300( from memory) on all cylinders which ruled out a compression issue on one cylinder.
Diesel injectors were both leak back tested continuity tested and load tested with the scope apart from marginally more on fuel returned on injector 2 all were around the same. (5ml more on 2 over 3 min test.)
This lead me to believe either all injectors were operating ok or all were faulty at the same rate. The latter although possible is unlikely. Meaning injectors were probably not the issue. I then smoke tested the vac and inlet systems and other than a pinhole size leak on the intercooler core showed inlet tract and vac system was intact. Meaning this common issue was not the cause off my missfire. I will later be changing the boost pipes and vac lines as there now 10 years and showing signs of age cracking and ware. But for the point of this they are ok.
While down there I noticed that the turbo VNT actuator arm was not in the position that I thought it should be so I removed the actuator hose from the boost control solonoid and using a vacuum/preshure hand pump I applied vac to the actuator. The arm moved as it should releasing vacume returning to the stop position. The actuator could be marginally pressed by hand. But still looked wrong. I then applied a small amount of preshure to the actuator to see if it moved the other way. (outwards) And it did. I tried leaving actuator off and revving car and it was better but still the miss was present. The VNT actuator had pushed back in slightly. Upon further inspection the VNT actuator return Spring has gone weak. Not allowing the VNT fins to return to the off vacume position. I removed the accuator and worked the accuator and the VNT arm freeing both up. Reassembled reved to 2000rpm and no missfire. Took for road test. Power was up massively
Time will tell how long this will last for and the accuator return Spring has gone soft. So the slight sticking of the VNT vanes will cause this not to return to its non vac position. I did think of adding a spring to the arm for extra assistance. But if it stays fixed will probably. Just have turbo reconditioned by turbo technics. At which point they fit a new actuator as part of the process.
Hope this helps others maybe find a solution to there problem.
Cheers Chris
Obviously being a workshop I have access to lots of diagnostics equipment including snap on and Hawkeye. Leak back testers snap on scope for electrical testing vac testers and smoke testers. All of this however was rather irelivent in this case as the vehicle had no fault codes apart from a fuel preshure code for delivery fuel preshure which was solved by replacing the lift pump ( fuel filter also changed at same time.)
Vehicle also suffered from a bad connection to the rail preshure sensor. Which both the sensor and loom were replaced. Also fitted was a Bosch maf a new boost solonoid and full service items. Compression was around 300( from memory) on all cylinders which ruled out a compression issue on one cylinder.
Diesel injectors were both leak back tested continuity tested and load tested with the scope apart from marginally more on fuel returned on injector 2 all were around the same. (5ml more on 2 over 3 min test.)
This lead me to believe either all injectors were operating ok or all were faulty at the same rate. The latter although possible is unlikely. Meaning injectors were probably not the issue. I then smoke tested the vac and inlet systems and other than a pinhole size leak on the intercooler core showed inlet tract and vac system was intact. Meaning this common issue was not the cause off my missfire. I will later be changing the boost pipes and vac lines as there now 10 years and showing signs of age cracking and ware. But for the point of this they are ok.
While down there I noticed that the turbo VNT actuator arm was not in the position that I thought it should be so I removed the actuator hose from the boost control solonoid and using a vacuum/preshure hand pump I applied vac to the actuator. The arm moved as it should releasing vacume returning to the stop position. The actuator could be marginally pressed by hand. But still looked wrong. I then applied a small amount of preshure to the actuator to see if it moved the other way. (outwards) And it did. I tried leaving actuator off and revving car and it was better but still the miss was present. The VNT actuator had pushed back in slightly. Upon further inspection the VNT actuator return Spring has gone weak. Not allowing the VNT fins to return to the off vacume position. I removed the accuator and worked the accuator and the VNT arm freeing both up. Reassembled reved to 2000rpm and no missfire. Took for road test. Power was up massively
Time will tell how long this will last for and the accuator return Spring has gone soft. So the slight sticking of the VNT vanes will cause this not to return to its non vac position. I did think of adding a spring to the arm for extra assistance. But if it stays fixed will probably. Just have turbo reconditioned by turbo technics. At which point they fit a new actuator as part of the process.
Hope this helps others maybe find a solution to there problem.
Cheers Chris
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