4th Gen Ram Tech 2009 - 2018 Rams and the 2019 Ram Classic: This section is for TECHNICAL discussions only, that involve the 2009 - 2018 Rams and the 2019 Ram Classic. For any non-tech discussions, please direct your attention to the "General discussion/NON-tech" sub sections.

2012 Ram 1500 5.7 Hemi misfire.

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Sep 30, 2017 | 07:20 PM
  #1  
chrisroberts359's Avatar
chrisroberts359
Thread Starter
|
Registered User
Joined: Sep 2017
Posts: 4
Likes: 0
Default 2012 Ram 1500 5.7 Hemi misfire.

Well i'm pretty new to this and i'm trying to find the best avenue to take. i have a 2012 Ram 1500 5.7 Hemi and about two weeks ago or so i started feeling like the truck starting to lose power. so i figure a good oil change and a set of new plugs and some 93 octane fuel would give it a good boost. well not the case. i changed the plugs and started shooting a code. i've never had it shoot a code before. i throw it on the code reader and P0305 is what i got, Cylinder 5 misfire. so i change the coil pack and still the same. so i alternate coil packs to see if i get it to chase. continue to misfire on cylinder 5. so now i'm at a loss and not sure what's next as i cant figure out what is causing the misfire. can anyone help me out?
 
Reply
Old Sep 30, 2017 | 10:31 PM
  #2  
HeyYou's Avatar
HeyYou
Administrator
Veteran: Air Force
Community Favorite
15 Year Member
Community Builder
Joined: Apr 2010
Posts: 87,483
Likes: 4,223
From: Clayton MI
Default

Moving this to 4th Gen Ram section for ya. Welcome to DF!
 
Reply
Old Oct 1, 2017 | 08:13 AM
  #3  
chrisroberts359's Avatar
chrisroberts359
Thread Starter
|
Registered User
Joined: Sep 2017
Posts: 4
Likes: 0
Default

Thank you
 
Reply
Old Oct 1, 2017 | 09:50 AM
  #4  
SHO Rod's Avatar
SHO Rod
Record Breaker
10 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
Joined: Feb 2015
Posts: 1,131
Likes: 55
From: Iowa
Default

Originally Posted by chrisroberts359
Well i'm pretty new to this and i'm trying to find the best avenue to take. i have a 2012 Ram 1500 5.7 Hemi and about two weeks ago or so i started feeling like the truck starting to lose power. so i figure a good oil change and a set of new plugs and some 93 octane fuel would give it a good boost. well not the case. i changed the plugs and started shooting a code. i've never had it shoot a code before. i throw it on the code reader and P0305 is what i got, Cylinder 5 misfire. so i change the coil pack and still the same. so i alternate coil packs to see if i get it to chase. continue to misfire on cylinder 5. so now i'm at a loss and not sure what's next as i cant figure out what is causing the misfire. can anyone help me out?
Pull the spark plug and visually inspect it. If you don't notice any cracks of the insulator or other obvious damage, swap it with another cylinder. It's possible either the spark plug is bad or it was damaged during the installation process.

-Rod
 
Reply
Old Oct 1, 2017 | 02:33 PM
  #5  
chrisroberts359's Avatar
chrisroberts359
Thread Starter
|
Registered User
Joined: Sep 2017
Posts: 4
Likes: 0
Default

Originally Posted by SHO Rod
Pull the spark plug and visually inspect it. If you don't notice any cracks of the insulator or other obvious damage, swap it with another cylinder. It's possible either the spark plug is bad or it was damaged during the installation process.

-Rod
Well actually I changed the spark plugs twice. I was sold the iridium to begin with and didn’t realize that I needed the copper resistor so I put the right spark plugs in and still have had misfire with two different sets of spark plugs so I don’t think it’s the spark plugs. After doing more research and talking with others, it may either be a broken valve spring or a bad lifter and cam shaft. I’m hoping it is the valve spring over the cam shaft. Either way I’m expecting his to be very expensive
 
Reply
Old Oct 2, 2017 | 07:35 AM
  #6  
SHO Rod's Avatar
SHO Rod
Record Breaker
10 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
Joined: Feb 2015
Posts: 1,131
Likes: 55
From: Iowa
Default

Originally Posted by chrisroberts359
Well actually I changed the spark plugs twice. I was sold the iridium to begin with and didn’t realize that I needed the copper resistor so I put the right spark plugs in and still have had misfire with two different sets of spark plugs so I don’t think it’s the spark plugs. After doing more research and talking with others, it may either be a broken valve spring or a bad lifter and cam shaft. I’m hoping it is the valve spring over the cam shaft. Either way I’m expecting his to be very expensive
But the cylinder #5 misfire didn't start until after you changed the spark plugs the first time (due to the perceived loss of power)? Granted it could just be a coincidence that that is the time some unrelated issue decided to happen, but that seems unlikely.

Also, I'm about due to change the spark plugs on my 2014 Ram 1500 Hemi and I was planning to put Iridium plugs in it just like I put in my prior 2011 Durango Hemi. May I ask what you learned/experienced that caused you to go back to copper resistor plugs?

-Rod
 
Reply
Old Oct 2, 2017 | 07:40 AM
  #7  
chrisroberts359's Avatar
chrisroberts359
Thread Starter
|
Registered User
Joined: Sep 2017
Posts: 4
Likes: 0
Default

Originally Posted by SHO Rod
But the cylinder #5 misfire didn't start until after you changed the spark plugs the first time (due to the perceived loss of power)? Granted it could just be a coincidence that that is the time some unrelated issue decided to happen, but that seems unlikely.

Also, I'm about due to change the spark plugs on my 2014 Ram 1500 Hemi and I was planning to put Iridium plugs in it just like I put in my prior 2011 Durango Hemi. May I ask what you learned/experienced that caused you to go back to copper resistor plugs?

-Rod
the irridium burns way to hot and could possibly burn a hole in your cylinder wall. The copper resistor doesn’t burn as hot and is what originally comes in the motor. That’s how it was explained to me
 
Reply
Old Oct 2, 2017 | 12:51 PM
  #8  
SHO Rod's Avatar
SHO Rod
Record Breaker
10 Year Member
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
Joined: Feb 2015
Posts: 1,131
Likes: 55
From: Iowa
Default

Originally Posted by chrisroberts359
the irridium burns way to hot and could possibly burn a hole in your cylinder wall. The copper resistor doesn’t burn as hot and is what originally comes in the motor. That’s how it was explained to me
Thank you for the information. I guess that's one less thing I can spend too much money on.

-Rod
 
Reply




All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:24 PM.