Buddy Holly
Professional Amateur
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2014
- Location
- North Raleigh
So I have been fighting an issue with a TJ for a hot minute now. My sanity has long since left the chat. This is long winded and bound to get very autistic, so strap in if you're keen. 
Here's the deets:
02 Jeep TJ, 4.0/32RH Automatic, 95k miles
I've been chasing a heat related misfire for the past few years. The engine runs great when it's cool outside. Anything under 70 degrees it runs perfect. Above 70 it drops cylinders and starts flashing the check engine light when you sustain RPM over 2500 for more than a few seconds. P0300 (random multiple misfire), P0301-306 (individual cylinder misfires) usually come with it as well. When it drops a cylinder, it is DEAD. I can pull over, shut the engine off, restart and the misfire vanishes until the engine sustains 2500+ rpm again for more than a few seconds.
Things that have been done in the past two years to try and fix the problem (and others that arose):
New cylinder head from Clearwater (cracked 0331)
New Intake manifold to replace the original with a cracked runner
New replacement factory-style coil
"Viper" coil upgrade when the factory coil didn't change the symptom
OEM remanufactured injectors
Wranglerfix "reman" PCM
Champion Iridium spark plugs
Replaced all wiring from firewall forward with a used harness from a wrecked TJ. Replaced any broken connectors and split all the loom off to inspect the wires to ensure nothing was melted in the injector harness or with any of the engine sensors. All connections have dielectric grease.
All new battery and ground cables (1/0 AWG)
If you couldn't tell, this jeep had a ton wrong with it but this damn misfire issue persists through it all.
The injectors I did yesterday and thought I had it licked. Today it misfired again
I can pull injector connectors on the affected cylinders with no change in how the engine runs. For reference, #2 and #5 usually dip out first, with #4 quickly behind. The previous injectors did the exact same thing. Next I tested the injector signals with the power probe and what I found is I am losing pulse soon as it sustains 2500+ for more than a few seconds. Thinking it was wiring related, I tore the harness apart and checked for anything melted or broken. Nothing found. For good measure I then checked injector pulse at the PCM connector and found the exact same issue with dropping injector pulse. It isn't a decay, it's immediate, like a switch was flipped.
My question for people who know more about these PCMs than I do: when the JTEC PCM detects a misfire on a specific cylinder, does it kill the injector pulse to prevent fuel from dumping into a cylinder that isn't igniting the mixture? The way I see it, I am stuck in a chicken or the egg situation right now. Either the PCM has an injector driver issue, or I have an ignition problem and that is causing my loss of injector pulse. I have dug through my FSM and a bunch of forum threads but I haven't gotten anywhere. Anybody have ideas? Is this a common thing for this era Chrysler PCM to shit injector drivers? Am I an idiot and missing something obvious?

Here's the deets:
02 Jeep TJ, 4.0/32RH Automatic, 95k miles
I've been chasing a heat related misfire for the past few years. The engine runs great when it's cool outside. Anything under 70 degrees it runs perfect. Above 70 it drops cylinders and starts flashing the check engine light when you sustain RPM over 2500 for more than a few seconds. P0300 (random multiple misfire), P0301-306 (individual cylinder misfires) usually come with it as well. When it drops a cylinder, it is DEAD. I can pull over, shut the engine off, restart and the misfire vanishes until the engine sustains 2500+ rpm again for more than a few seconds.
Things that have been done in the past two years to try and fix the problem (and others that arose):
New cylinder head from Clearwater (cracked 0331)
New Intake manifold to replace the original with a cracked runner
New replacement factory-style coil
"Viper" coil upgrade when the factory coil didn't change the symptom
OEM remanufactured injectors
Wranglerfix "reman" PCM
Champion Iridium spark plugs
Replaced all wiring from firewall forward with a used harness from a wrecked TJ. Replaced any broken connectors and split all the loom off to inspect the wires to ensure nothing was melted in the injector harness or with any of the engine sensors. All connections have dielectric grease.
All new battery and ground cables (1/0 AWG)
If you couldn't tell, this jeep had a ton wrong with it but this damn misfire issue persists through it all.
The injectors I did yesterday and thought I had it licked. Today it misfired again
I can pull injector connectors on the affected cylinders with no change in how the engine runs. For reference, #2 and #5 usually dip out first, with #4 quickly behind. The previous injectors did the exact same thing. Next I tested the injector signals with the power probe and what I found is I am losing pulse soon as it sustains 2500+ for more than a few seconds. Thinking it was wiring related, I tore the harness apart and checked for anything melted or broken. Nothing found. For good measure I then checked injector pulse at the PCM connector and found the exact same issue with dropping injector pulse. It isn't a decay, it's immediate, like a switch was flipped.My question for people who know more about these PCMs than I do: when the JTEC PCM detects a misfire on a specific cylinder, does it kill the injector pulse to prevent fuel from dumping into a cylinder that isn't igniting the mixture? The way I see it, I am stuck in a chicken or the egg situation right now. Either the PCM has an injector driver issue, or I have an ignition problem and that is causing my loss of injector pulse. I have dug through my FSM and a bunch of forum threads but I haven't gotten anywhere. Anybody have ideas? Is this a common thing for this era Chrysler PCM to shit injector drivers? Am I an idiot and missing something obvious?
Last edited:
tends to help.
