2004 3.7 almost entire 2nd bank of engine is missing
I did my timing chain about a month and a half ago in my 2004 dodge Dakota 3.7. Since that it had a funky idle, not quite a misfire but not as smooth as I think it would be. About a week ago my truck threw a p0300 changed the spark plugs and cleared the code. Code came back a week later adding p0304, after it did that you could feel the miss more. Took it to my work and the master tech read the live data on it and the miss only happened every like 100 revolutions on the engine, he said it was a bad lifter( engine has 260 k and I’m running 10w40 oil as I was having oil pressure issues, the truck does and always has had lifter tick) I don’t quite trust him as he’s an *** but he’s smart so maybe he’s right. Today my codes came back and I pulled a p0302 and p0304. What the hell is going on. Did I screw up the timing chain? Or is something else going on. I’ve had the truck for 2 months at this point and I’m not a professional mechanic + that was my first timing chain. Any advice appreciated
Its possible you could have it a tooth off on the cam gear on that bank 2. If your off a tooth it will usually still start and run but misfire and have next to no power. A bad lifter usually just causes noise and or poor valve timing on startup. So probably is bad but not relevant to the issues at hand. I wonder if you could pull the valve covers and see if the dots? Might be the easiest way to confirm without tearing out the front bay again.
Its possible you could have it a tooth off on the cam gear on that bank 2. If your off a tooth it will usually still start and run but misfire and have next to no power. A bad lifter usually just causes noise and or poor valve timing on startup. So probably is bad but not relevant to the issues at hand. I wonder if you could pull the valve covers and see if the dots? Might be the easiest way to confirm without tearing out the front bay again.
The 3.7 uses Coil On Plug right? Check your plugs for cracks or damage as well as burn marks on the coils. Check the gapping as well. Most of the time they are fine out of the box but you never know if one took a blow at some point. Do you have a scan tool? Check what the O2 sensors are reporting. If there is an O2 on both banks try unplugging the front ones. If the engine starts running better then replace them. Or at least the one on the misfiring bank. You can usually just tighten the bolts on the valve cover a bit to stop a leak. The p0300 is usually thrown first as its just looking for a certain total count of misfires. Its probable that the p0302 and p0304 were on there way to being set.






