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Running on two cylinders?

8.3K views 40 replies 10 participants last post by  NotNattyR6  
#1 ·

Been trying to figure out why my 2006 R6 has been running so sluggish. It has a really rough idle and throttle response is delayed. It was fine up until I was in diag mode testing out my injectors and coils and I heard a something pop like a can of soda opening. I moved my ignition coils around put new spark plugs thinking that was the issue, but no luck.I even moved my injectors around and its the same cylinders that aren't firing. Any insight would be great.
 
#2 ·
The pop was probably an ignition in the cylinder. Whether or not that could blow a gasket, dunno. I'd think there'd be warnings in the manual if that were a potential though.

What you'll want to do is enter diagnostic mode and manually fire spark on each cylinder; with the plugs out. If that pans out, then run a compression test.
 
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#4 ·
He mentioned that he rotated the coils and the same two cylinders aren't heating up the exhaust pipes.
 
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#5 ·
Yeah, I even removed the coils out from the cylinder with the spark plugs and fired them outside without any issues. I ordered a compressor tester today and see if maybe somehow my exhuast valve is shot, even though it has had a valve adjustment 3000 miles ago.
 
#15 ·
Bright side is, better that it passes the compression test.

If the ECU truly is bad, "voltage drop test" your grounding between engine/battery/regulator/frame.
 
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#17 ·
Two cylinders not firing, or cylinder two not firing? Was there any change at all since the ECU swap or truly the "same issue" ?
 
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#19 ·
You said you moved the injectors around, but are they actually firing? Did you check voltage at the connectors on them or pull them all out and see fuel spray out of them all? You have compression, air and fire.... The only thing left is fuel.
An easier way to see if you have fuel to all the cylinders is to lightly spray starting fluid in the intake. If those dead cylinders start producing heat then you know it is fuel. BTW, I would use a IR temp gun to check temps as that would be a better judge of an increase in temp.
 
#21 ·
Unplug the coils from the 2 good cylinders and spray a couple shots of starting fluid in the intake while attempting to start.
 
#22 · (Edited)
Figured it out..

It was an O ring in the fuel pump that wasn't completely seated.. the one next to the strainer. Or it might have been the fuel line hose from under the tank that wasn't completely hooked up, even though it did snap on. Crisps throttle response, no bonucy idle, no cold cylinder..

Now for some reason there knocking coming from the engine when it sits in neutral, however, when I engage the clutch it goes away. Any ideas on this issue now?
 
#23 · (Edited)
do you mean when you pull the lever in it goes away? that would be dis-engaging the clutch.
you should hear a slight knocking like that. it's normal. even my brand new R1 does it. slight. not a loud knocking. but you can hear it over the exhaust at idle. you're hearing the transmission spinning inside.
 
#24 ·
Yeah, when the clutch is pulled in the noise goes away. It’s been three weeks since I’ve ridden the bike now. I don’t ever remember hearing such a loud knock. I’ll upload a video in a bit. Thank you guys for all help on the other issue
 
#26 ·
I could be that your throttle bodies are out of sync. My 2007 r6 had a rough idle as well. I got spark plugs, did the valve adjustment, tried different coils, adjusted the throttle sensors. My problem was not resolved until I synced throttle bodies
 
#27 ·
Been trying to figure out why my 2006 R6 has been running so sluggish. It has a really rough idle and throttle response is delayed. It was fine up until I was in diag mode testing out my injectors and coils and I heard a something pop like a can of soda opening. I moved my ignition coils around put new spark plugs thinking that was the issue, but no luck.I even moved my injectors around and its the same cylinders that aren't firing. Any insight would be great.
Change coils and don't add dielectric grease as it rises up from the connector resulting in an improper connection.
 
#33 ·
ok that sounds excessive. but it's always hard to judge sounds recorded with phones and low quality mics built into cameras.

but that is the "knocking" I figured you were talking about. if you don't find anything wrong with the clutch basket etc try changing the oil to something else. if you're not using a motorcycle oil try using a motorcycle oil. they have better modifiers in it for the clutch operation.
 
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