2009 Cadillac CTS Firing Order (3.6L V6 1-2-3-4-5-6 • 6.2L V8 LS3 1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3) with Interactive Animations & Technical Details
⚙️ 2. Types of Firing Orders Across Engine Architectures
- Inline-4: 1-3-4-2 (most common) or 1-2-4-3.
- V6 60° (GM High Feature): 1-2-3-4-5-6 (used in 2009 CTS).
- V6 90° (odd-fire): Historic, but modern use rare.
- Cross-plane V8 (Ford): 1-5-4-2-6-3-7-8 vs GM LS family: 1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3.
- Flat-plane V8: 1-5-4-8-6-3-7-2 (Ferrari, GT350).
The 2009 Cadillac CTS-V uses the LS3 cross-plane firing order that provides the iconic V8 rumble and even power pulses every 90° of crankshaft rotation. The 3.6L V6 fires evenly every 120°.
🎬 3.6L V6 Firing Order: 1 🔥 2 🔥 3 🔥 4 🔥 5 🔥 6
Cylinder numbering: Bank 1 (driver side) front to rear: 1,3,5 | Bank 2 (passenger side): 2,4,6. Sequence: 1→2→3→4→5→6.
🏁 6.2L V8 LS3 Firing Order (CTS-V): 1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3
LS3 Layout: Left bank (driver side) 1-3-5-7, Right bank 2-4-6-8. Order 1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3 alternates banks for optimal primary balance.
✅ 3. Advantages of Correct Firing Order vs ❌ Disadvantages of Wrong Order
✔️ Advantages (correct OEM firing order)
- Smooth torque delivery and minimal vibration
- Improved fuel economy (up to 8% better than misfiring)
- Longer crankshaft and bearing service life
- Reduced exhaust emissions, passes smog tests
- Consistent power across RPM range
- Prevents false engine knock sensor readings
❌ Disadvantages / Risks (incorrect order)
- Rough idle, engine shaking, stalling
- Backfires through intake or exhaust, potential fire hazard
- Catalytic converter meltdown (unburnt fuel overheats)
- Loss of 30-50% power, poor acceleration
- Check engine light with P0300–P0308 codes
- Risk of damaging valves/pistons if interference engine
🛡️ 4. Is It Safe to Alter the Firing Order?
🔧 5. How to Check & Verify Firing Order on Your 2009 CTS
Step-by-step procedure:
- Identify engine: Check 8th digit of VIN: ‘7’ or ‘D’ = 3.6L V6; ‘E’ = 6.2L V8.
- Locate cylinder #1: On V6: driver side front cylinder. On V8: driver side front cylinder (bank 1).
- Inspect ignition coils: 2009 CTS uses coil-on-plug; each coil has cylinder number molded on connector or bracket.
- Use timing light: Connect inductive pickup to each plug wire (or use diagnostic scan tool to view misfire counters).
- Verify sequence: Crank engine and observe firing order against engine rotation direction (clockwise from front).
Pro tip: After replacing plugs or coils, always double-check connectors – mixing coil harness connections is a common mistake that changes the effective firing order.
📐 6. Engineering Deep Dive: Firing Order & Crankshaft Balance
The 2009 Cadillac CTS 3.6L V6 uses a 60° bank angle with a 1-2-3-4-5-6 firing order, which distributes firing intervals evenly at 120° crankshaft rotation. This eliminates any rocking couple and results in very smooth operation without requiring a balance shaft. Meanwhile, the LS3 V8’s 1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3 firing order sequences cylinders as “banks alternately firing”, reducing intake manifold pressure waves and improving volumetric efficiency. Additionally, the LS3 firing order allows the use of a cross-plane crankshaft with heavy counterweights, creating the signature V8 burble. The specific order also reduces the load on the #4 main bearing compared to older SBC orders.
| Engine | Displacement | Firing Order | Cylinder Numbering (front to rear) | Bank Designation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3.6L V6 (LY7/LLT) | 3564 cc | 1-2-3-4-5-6 | Bank1: 1,3,5 ; Bank2: 2,4,6 | Bank 1 driver side |
| 6.2L V8 (LS3) | 6162 cc | 1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3 | Left:1,3,5,7 ; Right:2,4,6,8 | Bank 1 left, Bank 2 right |
⚠️ 7. Symptoms of Incorrect Firing Order – What to Watch For
- Engine cranks but won’t start: Severe ignition timing mismatch.
- Loud backfiring: Unburnt fuel ignites in exhaust or intake.
- Heavy vibration at idle: Combustion pulses fighting crankshaft dynamics.
- Poor acceleration & hesitation: Torque delivery is erratic.
- Check engine light flashing: Misfire codes and possible catalyst damage.
🏁 8. Use Cases: Aftermarket Tuning & Performance
While stock firing order is sacrosanct for daily drivers, professional drag racers sometimes perform a “4/7 swap” on LS engines to improve cylinder-to-cylinder distribution and reduce detonation. However, that requires a custom camshaft. For the 2009 CTS-V, sticking to OEM 1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3 yields the best power band. When building a high-boost application, maintaining the correct order ensures proper ignition timing mapping from the factory ECU.