RB26 Firing Order Encyclopedia
⚙️ 2. Why 1-5-3-6-2-4? Crankshaft Journal Physics
The RB26 crankshaft features six crank throws arranged in three pairs (1&6, 2&5, 3&4), each pair sharing the same pin position but offset by 120° between successive pairs. This geometry forces the firing order to follow a pattern starting with cylinder #1, then skipping two cylinders (#5) to maintain even 120° intervals. The mathematical reason: For an inline-6, the only even-firing patterns are permutations of 1-5-3-6-2-4 or 1-4-2-5-3-6. Nissan chose the former because it alternates firing between the front three and rear three cylinders (1,5,3 are front-mid, then 6,2,4 are rear-mid), drastically reducing vibration in the crankshaft’s 3rd order harmonic.
🎬 Live RB26 Firing Order Animation
Visual demonstration of firing sequence: Highlighted cylinder represents active power stroke. Sequence repeats: 1 → 5 → 3 → 6 → 2 → 4.
💡 How to use: Watch the orange highlight travel across the six cylinders exactly as the RB26 ECU triggers each ignition coil. Use this to memorize the sequence or to verify ignition harness routing.
✅ 3. Advantages of RB26 Firing Order (1-5-3-6-2-4)
Inline-6 engines are naturally balanced, but this order minimizes second-order forces, reducing stress on main bearings.
Alternating firing between cylinders 1-2-3 and 4-5-6 feeds each turbo with evenly spaced exhaust pulses, cutting lag by ~15%.
Even 120° firing prevents harmonic twisting of the crankshaft, allowing safe sustained operation up to 8500 RPM in built engines.
The specific order creates the aggressive, sequential “ripping” exhaust note that GT-Rs are famous for.
⚠️ 4. Disadvantages & Common Pitfalls
- Diagnostic complexity: Misfire on cylinder #5 (second in sequence) can be misinterpreted as fueling issue if you don’t know the firing order.
- Wiring confusion: Aftermarket ECUs require correct cylinder output assignment; mixed wires cause backfires and engine damage.
- Not compatible with “split” firing pattern: Unlike crossplane V8s, you cannot reorder without a custom crankshaft.
- Engine balance at very low RPM: At idle, the 1-5-3-6-2-4 order can produce slight unevenness if individual cylinder trims are not calibrated.
📊 5. Types of Firing Orders in Inline-6 Engines
There are two primary types of inline-6 firing orders in production engines:
- Type N (Nissan/RB/2JZ): 1-5-3-6-2-4 – crankshaft pin journal arrangement pairs 1-6, 2-5, 3-4 with 120° offset.
- Type B (BMW M50/M54, Toyota 7M): 1-4-2-5-3-6 – different crank phasing, more common in older European designs.
The RB26 uses Type N because it offers superior exhaust manifold pulse isolation for twin-scroll or twin-turbo setups. Many aftermarket tuners have tested both on engine dynos; Type N gives 12-18 ft-lbs more midrange torque on forced induction due to reduced reversion.
🛠️ 6. How To Verify RB26 Firing Order (Step-by-Step)
How to check if your RB26 firing order is correct:
- Locate cylinder #1: Frontmost cylinder near the timing belt cover. Cylinder #6 at the firewall.
- Inspect coil harness: Coil connectors should be wired to ECU pins according to Nissan wiring diagram: ECU firing output order is 1 → 5 → 3 → 6 → 2 → 4.
- Use a timing light: Clamp to cylinder #1 spark plug wire. Crank engine and verify each subsequent cylinder fires at 120° intervals (manual rotation with degree wheel).
- Perform a power balance test: With engine idling, disconnect each coil one at a time in order 1-5-3-6-2-4. RPM drop should be consistent.
- Advanced method – oscilloscope: Measure crankshaft position sensor signals together with injector pulses; the pattern must match 1-5-3-6-2-4.
🛡️ 7. Is It Safe To Change The RB26 Firing Order?
No, it is absolutely NOT safe to attempt changing the firing order to any other sequence (e.g., 1-4-2-5-3-6) on a stock RB26. The crankshaft’s journal indexing, camshaft lobe positions, and ignition trigger wheel are physically ground only for 1-5-3-6-2-4. Forcing a different order leads to:
- Valve-to-piston collision: The cam timing relative to the crank will be misaligned, destroying pistons and valves instantly.
- Violent torsional vibrations: Will break the crankshaft or oil pump drive within minutes.
- Erratic ECU readings: The crank angle sensor expects a specific pattern; wrong firing order confuses ignition timing adaptation.
The only scenario where changes are possible is with a fully custom billet crankshaft, custom camshafts, and standalone ECU (e.g., aftermarket drag engines). However, even 2000hp RB builds retain the stock order.
❌ 8. Common Myths & Misconceptions About RB26 Firing Order
🏁 9. Real-World Use Cases: Motorsport & Tuning
The RB26 firing order is critical for sequential injection timing. Top tuners use the order to adjust individual cylinder fueling based on EGT sensors. In drag racing, the even firing provides consistent torque delivery, reducing wheel hop. For drift cars, the 1-5-3-6-2-4 pattern ensures linear throttle response, making it easier to hold angles. In time attack builds, the order reduces stress on the crank hub, allowing reliable 9000+ RPM operation with upgraded oiling.
📋 10. Complete Cylinder & Firing Reference Table
| Firing Rank | Cylinder # | Crankshaft Angle (deg) | Ignition Event | Exhaust Manifold Output |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | 1 | 0° (TDC #1) | Ignition #1 | Front turbo pulse 1 |
| 2nd | 5 | 120° | Ignition #2 | Rear turbo pulse 1 |
| 3rd | 3 | 240° | Ignition #3 | Front turbo pulse 2 |
| 4th | 6 | 360° | Ignition #4 | Rear turbo pulse 2 |
| 5th | 2 | 480° | Ignition #5 | Front turbo pulse 3 |
| 6th | 4 | 600° | Ignition #6 | Rear turbo pulse 3 |
🚨 11. Symptoms of Incorrect Firing Order & Diagnostics
- Severe backfiring through intake or exhaust.
- Engine cranks but won’t start – if two wires swapped, engine may run but extremely rough.
- Harsh vibration that increases with RPM (dangerous).
- Check engine light with misfire codes on random cylinders.
- Overheating catalytic converters due to unburnt fuel.
Diagnostic tip: Use an automotive oscilloscope to compare cam and crank signals with known good pattern; the firing order should correspond to expected compression peaks.
❓ 12. Frequently Asked Questions (RB26 Firing Order)
1-5-3-6-2-4. That’s official for all RB26DETT engines (R32, R33, R34, and Nismo variants).
Because the crankshaft throw phasing (pairs 1&6, 2&5, 3&4 with 120° spacing) forces this order. It also improves turbo response and reduces vibration.
The 1-5-3-6-2-4 order produces a characteristic “staggered” pulse pattern that creates the iconic RB26 growl, different from BMW’s inline-6 sound.
Both engines share 1-5-3-6-2-4, so theoretically same sequence, but ignition triggers and cam profiles are different. Never swap parts expecting direct compatibility.
Timing light, basic multimeter, Nissan service manual wiring diagram, and optionally a crank trigger simulator.
Yes, misfiring can lead to raw fuel entering exhaust, detonation inside exhaust manifold, and false knock sensor readings — dangerous.