Misfire Cylinder #1, brand new coils and spark plugs. Please help!
Is the P0301 code the only code? What about fuel trims for cylinder 1?
Last edited by JettaRed; Oct 4, 2024 at 09:24 AM.
yes, M272 engine.
How do I check the compression and fuel injector and fuel trims for cylinder 1.
P0301 is the only code.








Last edited by JCM_MB; Oct 3, 2024 at 08:43 PM.
The other way is to get a physical or mechanical compression test kit. There are lots of YouTube videos showing how to do it. Cylinder compression should be around 150 psi +/-25 psi, but all cylinders should be close to each other.
Testing the fuel injector is easiest done by moving it to another cylinder. I said easiest, not easy. Still, you are working with a traditional, non-GDI fuel system, so replacing all the fuel injectors with matched and balance injectors is an option. Did that on my 2004 SL500 and the car actually ran better with better gas mileage.
Lastly, you will need a scan tool that will show your LTFT overall. (It's an OBD standard so you may be able to do it with a generic scanner, but generic scanners are usually a waste of money on a Mercedes.) If Bank 1, where cylinder 1 resides, is significantly different from Bank 2, then you know you may have a bad injector. If the trims are a negative value greater than 10%, you have a problem. If the trims are within +/-10%, you're probably OK.
All the other recommendations are good first steps in trying to isolate the problem.
Last edited by JettaRed; Oct 9, 2024 at 08:19 AM.
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I have seen that the injection controller is damaged on the internal side of ECU on other brands.
Last edited by GOPHIMBO; Oct 4, 2024 at 02:48 PM.




Sorting out what may be wrong is non trivial to guess corrective actions.
Improving Bosch's best systems is a near miracle. Team MS! rocks.

Last edited by CaliBenzDriver; Oct 4, 2024 at 04:09 PM.




I got the misfire on cylinder #2 with rough idle. Clearing the code it ran just a few hours fine, but problem returned.
- Replaced the spark plug but no help.
- Moved the cam shaft adjustor magnets between the banks with no help.
Did a little research and found out about the VVT solenoid problem. This engine has this solenoid for each bank and after replacing it on the bank for cylinder #2 the problem went away.
So, as the VVT solenoid is for the whole bank of cylinders and the error code was only misfire on cylinder #2 it could be that this code does not mean only cylinder #2 just because this VVT solenoid works all the cylinders in the same bank.
So, in this MB case perhaps the problem is with the camshaft adjustor magnets especially is the problem comes back.
I don't know if MB engines have that VVT solenoid...?




I got the misfire on cylinder #2 with rough idle. Clearing the code it ran just a few hours fine, but problem returned.
- Replaced the spark plug but no help.
- Moved the cam shaft adjustor magnets between the banks with no help.
Did a little research and found out about the VVT solenoid problem. This engine has this solenoid for each bank and after replacing it on the bank for cylinder #2 the problem went away.
So, as the VVT solenoid is for the whole bank of cylinders and the error code was only misfire on cylinder #2 it could be that this code does not mean only cylinder #2 just because this VVT solenoid works all the cylinders in the same bank.
So, in this MB case perhaps the problem is with the camshaft adjustor magnets especially is the problem comes back.
I don't know if MB engines have that VVT solenoid...?
the M276/8 use 4x independent VVT Gears positioned by 4x oil solenoids and 4x Camshaft sensors.
The variable camshat timing works based on available oil pressure... so clean + cooled oil is essential to reliably position camshafts based on pre-learned maps.
Does your Durango feature a variable oil pump as well?
Last edited by CaliBenzDriver; Oct 6, 2024 at 05:26 PM.




These are not cam shaft solenoids what I am talking about. These are cam shaft adjustor magnets that the MB engine has as well as the Dodge engine, but the Dodge engine also has VVT cam shaft solenoid that looks like picture below. That is what was broken in my Dodge causing cylinder #2 misfire. As the same cam shaft works valves for all cylinders in the same bank the misfire could have been in any of the three cylinders, but it calls it only for cylinder #2, which is the first one in front on driver side.
I have seen several posts in different forums about this Dodge engine and they all have it as cylinder #2 misfire. I just cannot believe that if the culprit for this problem is this VVT solenoid it causes misfire only in Cylinder #2 when all three cylinders have the same cam shaft that this solenoid adjusts somehow.
I do not know if MB engine has solenoid that does this function.




the M276/8 use 4x independent VVT Gears positioned by 4x oil solenoids and 4x Camshaft sensors.
The variable camshat timing works based on available oil pressure... so clean + cooled oil is essential to reliably position camshafts based on pre-learned maps.
Does your Durango feature a variable oil pump as well?
I do not know if the Dodge has variable oil pump.




-- You are right about fault codes being MISLEADING... this is so often that one may begin to think "purposely misleading".
Existing codes are misleading and missing codes as well. Some faults are concealed under wrap to be left ignored.
-- Recently I mentioned the "CAN traffic jams" caused by carefully located marginal connections. It detunes no less than both engine + tranny timings.
-- Oil pressure sensor is missing all together, no fault there either.
-- Voltage yoyo is another sweet chaos in charge of X-Mas trees. No warning: all good!
-- Recently we were looking at tranmy module codes saying "solenoid valve fault" when in fact it's bad gearbox K3 clutch controlled by solenoid.
Once you know, you troubleshoot systems before anything else.

Last edited by CaliBenzDriver; Oct 6, 2024 at 06:46 PM.




These are not cam shaft solenoids what I am talking about. These are cam shaft adjustor magnets that the MB engine has as well as the Dodge engine, but the Dodge engine also has VVT cam shaft solenoid that looks like picture below. That is what was broken in my Dodge causing cylinder #2 misfire. As the same cam shaft works valves for all cylinders in the same bank the misfire could have been in any of the three cylinders, but it calls it only for cylinder #2, which is the first one in front on driver side.
I have seen several posts in different forums about this Dodge engine and they all have it as cylinder #2 misfire. I just cannot believe that if the culprit for this problem is this VVT solenoid it causes misfire only in Cylinder #2 when all three cylinders have the same cam shaft that this solenoid adjusts somehow.
I do not know if MB engine has solenoid that does this function.
Those go in the center of the VVT. Perhaps others can explain how the "camshaft timing solenoid adjusters" interact with the "camshafts timing solenoid pressure valve"
Last edited by JCM_MB; Oct 6, 2024 at 07:00 PM.




Those go in the center of the VVT. Perhaps others can explain how the "camshaft timing solenoid adjusters" interact with the "camshafts timing solenoid pressure valve"
The standard rattle wear items are
-1- the VVT Gear lock pin that suffers from low oil pressure
-2- the chain tensioners that become limp from abnormal oil pressure
-3- when rattle is ignored the camshaft has a loose ring that cause its failure.
-4- CPS sensors quietly leak oil into harness for $10k repair.
Better oiling is thought to prevent these unnecessary failures related to limited oil pressure.
Last edited by CaliBenzDriver; Oct 6, 2024 at 08:35 PM.




Those go in the center of the VVT. Perhaps others can explain how the "camshaft timing solenoid adjusters" interact with the "camshafts timing solenoid pressure valve"
In the Durango engine fix was easy. Part was little over $100 from AutoZone, job was about 30 min that required removing the air filter housing to get to this solenoid.
If the problem is with the other bank solenoid (passenger side) the job is a bit bigger as the intake manifold has to be removed to get to it. It seems still much less than if these need to be changed out in the MB engine, but I do not know for sure. Hopefully never comes up and the most serious issue will be the cam shaft magnets...
All ignition coils and spark plugs are new btw.
is Xentry a Mercedes specific scanner? Never heard of it before.
I haven't done compression, you posted a kit from Amazon earlier. do you recommend that or just get the Xentry scanner? Thanks for the help!



