Sponsored

Backfires while going WOT?

OGMix376

Well-Known Member
First Name
Bryan
Joined
Jun 30, 2024
Threads
3
Messages
1,033
Reaction score
3,529
Location
California
Vehicle(s)
2023 Oxford White Ranger Tremor
Occupation
House Maintenance Technician ;)
Get a BOV and then be on and off the gas all the time. You’ll be the envy of all the cool kids down at the AutoZone parking lot.

“Hey, everyone, here comes Sid!”

Pssshh, pakka, pakka, pakka, pak.
Pssshh, pakka, pakka, pakka, pak.
Pssshh, pakka, pakka, pakka, pak.

IMG_8699.gif
It’s true..

I know from experience 😂
Waiting for the Chris Farley and Adam Sandler clip to post now🤭
 

Grandaccess

Well-Known Member
First Name
Robert
Joined
Jul 8, 2023
Threads
5
Messages
1,097
Reaction score
2,465
Location
Binghamton, N.Y
Vehicle(s)
2021 Ford Ranger XLT FX4
Occupation
Computer Consultant
When ever you change something "anything", it will always change something else somewhere down line "always"
the whole thing was designed, tuned and tested to work the way it came off the line within normal driving habits... granted most of us are way outside "Normal" and we put up with what ever it breaks :(
I would think a muffler delete would change how the brain sees things would change it more than 3% out of spec. and the brain somehow would compensate somewhere else to bring it back in design spec....
 
OP
OP
Msfitoy

Msfitoy

Well-Known Member
First Name
Sid
Joined
Mar 5, 2019
Threads
67
Messages
9,197
Reaction score
28,379
Location
North Carolina
Vehicle(s)
2019 Ranger, 2003 MINI Cooper S, 2021 Honda CT125
Occupation
NWO Robot Polisher
Vehicle Showcase
1


OP
OP
Msfitoy

Msfitoy

Well-Known Member
First Name
Sid
Joined
Mar 5, 2019
Threads
67
Messages
9,197
Reaction score
28,379
Location
North Carolina
Vehicle(s)
2019 Ranger, 2003 MINI Cooper S, 2021 Honda CT125
Occupation
NWO Robot Polisher
Vehicle Showcase
1
When ever you change something "anything", it will always change something else somewhere down line "always"
the whole thing was designed, tuned and tested to work the way it came off the line within normal driving habits... granted most of us are way outside "Normal" and we put up with what ever it breaks :(
I would think a muffler delete would change how the brain sees things would change it more than 3% out of spec. and the brain somehow would compensate somewhere else to bring it back in design spec....
It was designed to be "normal" but the tranny couldn't identify with that and left the party...
 
Last edited:

TJC

Well-Known Member
First Name
Tony
Joined
Aug 28, 2020
Threads
45
Messages
3,945
Reaction score
9,906
Location
North Carolina
Vehicle(s)
93 Miata, 05 Ranger 4x4, 20 Ranger 4x4, 23 CX-5
One other thought, we used a rich mixture to keep knock under control during boost. We had knock sensors on our aftermarket ECUs that would retard timing and enrich the fuel to keep boost knock under control.

Ford must be doing the same as the physics hasn't changed.

Are you truly getting backfires up through the intake? As opposed to bangs coming out the exhaust?

If it is backfires (coming up through the intake) it is a timing or intake valve (not closing in the compression / combustion stroke) issue.

If the bang is coming out the exhaust I'd bet it is excess fuel igniting in the exhaust pipe. If it is excessive unburnt fuel, your catalytic converter is at risk of damage. Add a muffler to slow the exhaust flow or lean out the A/F mixture.

I have no idea just how much A/F ratio auto compensation Ford has built into the ECU system, but I'd wager it may not be enough.

Take this for what it's worth as I'm drawing from my early to mid 90's days tuning turbo and supercharged 1.6L and 1.8L Mazda Miatas.
 
OP
OP
Msfitoy

Msfitoy

Well-Known Member
First Name
Sid
Joined
Mar 5, 2019
Threads
67
Messages
9,197
Reaction score
28,379
Location
North Carolina
Vehicle(s)
2019 Ranger, 2003 MINI Cooper S, 2021 Honda CT125
Occupation
NWO Robot Polisher
Vehicle Showcase
1
One other thought, we used a rich mixture to keep knock under control during boost. We had knock sensors on our aftermarket ECUs that would retard timing and enrich the fuel to keep boost knock under control.

Ford must be doing the same as the physics hasn't changed.

Are you truly getting backfires up through the intake? As opposed to bangs coming out the exhaust?

If it is backfires (coming up through the intake) it is a timing or intake valve (not closing in the compression / combustion stroke) issue.

If the bang is coming out the exhaust I'd bet it is excess fuel igniting in the exhaust pipe. If it is excessive unburnt fuel, your catalytic converter is at risk of damage. Add a muffler to slow the exhaust flow or lean out the A/F mixture.

I have no idea just how much A/F ratio auto compensation Ford has built into the ECU system, but I'd wager it may not be enough.

Take this for what it's worth as I'm drawing from my early to mid 90's days tuning turbo and supercharged 1.6L and 1.8L Mazda Miatas.
Hi Tony...yes, backfires noise definitely coming from behind me from the exhaust...I had to do a Mdelete because the I bought rusted it way to the recycling dump...I'll probably fix this with a resonator insert later...maybe a SuperTrapp?
 
Last edited:

Ninong

Well-Known Member
First Name
Dave
Joined
May 8, 2023
Threads
4
Messages
113
Reaction score
483
Location
Tacoma
Vehicle(s)
2020 Ford Ranger Lariat/Velociraptor
Occupation
Retired
By definition a "backfire" occurs in the intake side of the engine, not the exhaust. the popping you are hearing is caused by unburnt fuel entering the exhaust and then being ignited. I suspect this is due to lower back pressure from you deleting your muffler. The engine needs a certain amount of back pressure to keep the combustion flame in the cylinder as the exhaust valve opens. The other remote possibility is that you are experience some valve float at high RPMs. I would lean towards the muffler since the problem only showed up after you removed it.
 
OP
OP
Msfitoy

Msfitoy

Well-Known Member
First Name
Sid
Joined
Mar 5, 2019
Threads
67
Messages
9,197
Reaction score
28,379
Location
North Carolina
Vehicle(s)
2019 Ranger, 2003 MINI Cooper S, 2021 Honda CT125
Occupation
NWO Robot Polisher
Vehicle Showcase
1
By definition a "backfire" occurs in the intake side of the engine, not the exhaust. the popping you are hearing is caused by unburnt fuel entering the exhaust and then being ignited. I suspect this is due to lower back pressure from you deleting your muffler. The engine needs a certain amount of back pressure to keep the combustion flame in the cylinder as the exhaust valve opens. The other remote possibility is that you are experience some valve float at high RPMs. I would lean towards the muffler since the problem only showed up after you removed it.
Is there another term to describe this exhaust "backfire"? I was under 6K rpm so valve float can be ruled out...the consensus seems to be add a muffler...
 

airline tech

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 24, 2022
Threads
28
Messages
4,464
Reaction score
8,542
Location
Midwest - KS
Vehicle(s)
2022 Ranger Lariat-Super Crew, Cactus Gray
Occupation
Aircraft Tech
Backfire can be in either Intake or Exhaust manifold.
Anything outside of the combustion chamber (uncontrolled)
 

airline tech

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 24, 2022
Threads
28
Messages
4,464
Reaction score
8,542
Location
Midwest - KS
Vehicle(s)
2022 Ranger Lariat-Super Crew, Cactus Gray
Occupation
Aircraft Tech
I think a good post for this thread would be to post Live Data of fuel related PIDs, when I get some time, I may just put something together.

This way there would be a (somewhat) baseline to compare with and without muffler, and will it show a big difference?
Then with a KAM reset - it would highlight if the PIDs come back to near normal even with the muffler delete.

This is only going by a (ASSUMPTION) we will see a noted difference - Mainly the STFT & LTFT as those will show (Rich or Lean) trends, at this point I am only (GUESSING) that the O2 sensors are being possibly thrown off and the PCM is commanding more fuel (Positive - Fuel Trims).
I cannot confirm that without comparative data.

Granted there are factors of difference between the comparisons which will slightly differ.
Mileage, Fuel Grade , Spark Plug Age etc. - Stock vs Stock Engines.

I am only assuming that a KAM Reset may help - I would try that before I would Tune it.
This is where a (Tuner) guy who has more in-depth knowledge of the PCM (internal software) can shed some input on the matter.

I will try to get something by the weekend.
 
  • Like
Reactions: TJC

TJC

Well-Known Member
First Name
Tony
Joined
Aug 28, 2020
Threads
45
Messages
3,945
Reaction score
9,906
Location
North Carolina
Vehicle(s)
93 Miata, 05 Ranger 4x4, 20 Ranger 4x4, 23 CX-5
Having a real world baseline sample is a good beginning. It will be interesting to see the delta differences as you suggested.
 

Ninong

Well-Known Member
First Name
Dave
Joined
May 8, 2023
Threads
4
Messages
113
Reaction score
483
Location
Tacoma
Vehicle(s)
2020 Ford Ranger Lariat/Velociraptor
Occupation
Retired
Is there another term to describe this exhaust "backfire"? I was under 6K rpm so valve float can be ruled out...the consensus seems to be add a muffler...
In the drag racing world we called it "shooting ducks"
Sponsored

 
 








Top