2007 Chevy Tahoe Firing Order: The Definitive LS V8
1‑8‑7‑2‑6‑5‑4‑3 — Interactive Animation, Crankshaft Physics & Diagnostics
⚙️ Why the LS Firing Order Matters: Crankshaft & Balance
The LS firing order was a radical departure from the traditional small-block Chevy (SBC) order 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2. Engineers at GM Powertrain redesigned the crankshaft journal phasing to reduce main bearing loads and improve crankcase rigidity. With the order 1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3, the engine achieves:
- Optimal crankshaft counterweight balancing – reduces torsional vibration by 22% vs old SBC.
- Better exhaust scavenging – because the firing alternates banks more evenly, it improves pulse tuning in the exhaust manifolds.
- Lower peak bearing pressure – journal overlap stresses reduced, allowing higher power output (up to 400+ hp stock in L92).
🔄 Types & Historical Evolution: From SBC to LS
V8 engines use two dominant firing order families:
- Oldsmobile / Chevrolet traditional (1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2): Used on Gen I and Gen II small-blocks (1955–2000). Cylinders 1 & 8 share crankpin but fire 270° apart, causing high bearing stress.
- Ford / LS order (1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3): Also called the “Reverse” or “Modified” order. GM adopted it for LS engines in 1997. Improves idle smoothness and allows higher RPM operation.
- Flat-plane V8 firing orders (e.g., Ferrari, GT350): 1-5-4-8-6-3-7-2 (even firing 180° intervals). Not used in Tahoe due to vibration in heavy trucks.
Your 2007 Tahoe uses the LS cross-plane crankshaft with the 1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3 order – the modern standard for GM V8 trucks.
🛠️ How to Verify Firing Order on a 2007 Tahoe (Lab & DIY)
Method 1 – Scan tool / relative compression: Use a bidirectional scan tool to perform a “cylinder power balance” or “injector kill” test. The PCM will cut each cylinder in the correct firing sequence order. Method 2 – Oscilloscope (primary ignition): Connect a low-amp current probe around each coil’s power feed. The order of current ramps should match 1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3 when viewed at crankshaft sync. Method 3 – Camshaft position sensor pattern: The reluctor wheel has 4X or 24X signals; the firing order is encoded in ECU logic. Method 4 – Visual verification on rebuilt engine: After installing the camshaft, rotate engine and watch valves open/close to confirm cylinder event order (mechanical verification).
✅ Is It Safe To Change Firing Order? (Spoiler: No)
Is it safe? Absolutely not for a stock 2007 Tahoe. The engine control module (ECM), camshaft lobe phasing, crankshaft reluctor wheel, and exhaust manifold design are all optimized for 1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3. Changing the firing order requires a custom billet camshaft, aftermarket ECU (like Holley Terminator), custom grind with different lobe separation, and rebalancing the crankshaft. Without proper modifications, engine will backfire, destroy pistons, and bend valves.
✅ Smooth idle, low NVH
✅ Higher crankshaft fatigue life
✅ Better torque curve from 1500–5000 RPM
✅ Reduced oil consumption from even ring sealing
❌ Violent misfire & backfire
❌ Melted catalytic converters ($2k+ repair)
❌ Bent pushrods or valves
❌ Broken crankshaft harmonics
🔧 How Firing Order Interacts with Camshaft Timing & Reluctor Wheels
The LS engine uses a 24x or 58x crankshaft reluctor wheel (2007 Tahoe Gen IV uses 58x). The ECU reads missing teeth and determines which cylinder is approaching TDC compression. The firing order is hard-coded in the ECU and must match camshaft phasing (the camshaft’s lobe arrangement also follows the same order). If you install a camshaft designed for the old SBC order (1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2) into an LS, the valves will open at wrong times, causing catastrophic piston-to-valve contact. Always verify cam card: LS cams have “1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3” ground into the lobe profile.
📊 Advanced Diagnostics: Testing Firing Order With an Oscilloscope
Professional mechanics use a lab scope to capture cylinder identification (CID) signals. Connect a secondary ignition probe (or current clamp) to each coil’s primary circuit. With the crankshaft position sensor (CKP) as reference, you should see firing events exactly in the order: cyl1, cyl8, cyl7, cyl2, cyl6, cyl5, cyl4, cyl3. If mis-ordered, check the ECM programming, camshaft reluctor or damaged wiring harness. Example firing interval on scope: 90° crank degrees between each successive cylinder.
📐 Firing Order Reference Table (Cylinder Bank & Degrees)
| Firing step | Cylinder | Crank angle after TDC#1 | Bank |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | 0° (TDC compression) | Left (Driver) |
| 2 | 8 | 90° | Right (Passenger) |
| 3 | 7 | 180° | Left |
| 4 | 2 | 270° | Right |
| 5 | 6 | 360° | Right |
| 6 | 5 | 450° | Left |
| 7 | 4 | 540° | Right |
| 8 | 3 | 630° | Left |
Complete cycle repeats every 720° of crankshaft rotation (2 full turns).
🛞 Practical Use Cases: When Firing Order Knowledge Saves Your Tahoe
- Engine rebuild / camshaft replacement: Aligning the cam gear timing marks assumes correct firing order; degreeing the cam requires knowing which cylinder fires when.
- Misfire troubleshooting: P0301–P0308 codes refer to specific cylinders; understanding the order helps deduce pattern failures (e.g., all cylinders on one bank).
- Exhaust header tuning: Performance builders pair cylinders that are 180° apart to improve scavenging (e.g., pairing 1 & 6 in crossover pipes).
- ECM swapping / tuning: If upgrading to a standalone ECU, you must enter the correct firing order in the ignition setup menu (most Holley and Haltech have LS order preset).