granit_silber
08-01-2005, 04:38 PM
Hey Guys,
Today on my way home I noticed that something funny was going on.
When I stepped on the accelerator, the car felt a little rough. As it's only 87 or so here, I had the windows down and also noticed that when the engine was rough I heard a clunk sound in the read-end.
I started thinking Guibo (that was after the "Oh Crap!). However, after a little further down the road the clunk wasn't a clunk it was a puff; and rather than the rear end it was coming out of the tailpipe!
The puff happens only under decent acceleration (pedal pushed 1/2 or further). When the car is crusing it's okay and under slow (read grandpa) acceleration it's okay.
Now the noise isn't a pop or backfire, just a puff. I haven't changed the fuel filter(it's due and I've ordered one). I did change the spark plugs earlier this year.
My thought is that I am having a no spark situation in one of the cylinders.
So here's my question...
How do I check to see if my diagnosis is correct and which cylinder the problem is? I don't own a multi-meter, timing light, etc...
I do own basic tools and sockets and live 2 miles from a Harbor Freight store.
Thanks!
-ashley
Today on my way home I noticed that something funny was going on.
When I stepped on the accelerator, the car felt a little rough. As it's only 87 or so here, I had the windows down and also noticed that when the engine was rough I heard a clunk sound in the read-end.
I started thinking Guibo (that was after the "Oh Crap!). However, after a little further down the road the clunk wasn't a clunk it was a puff; and rather than the rear end it was coming out of the tailpipe!
The puff happens only under decent acceleration (pedal pushed 1/2 or further). When the car is crusing it's okay and under slow (read grandpa) acceleration it's okay.
Now the noise isn't a pop or backfire, just a puff. I haven't changed the fuel filter(it's due and I've ordered one). I did change the spark plugs earlier this year.
My thought is that I am having a no spark situation in one of the cylinders.
So here's my question...
How do I check to see if my diagnosis is correct and which cylinder the problem is? I don't own a multi-meter, timing light, etc...
I do own basic tools and sockets and live 2 miles from a Harbor Freight store.
Thanks!
-ashley