2004 Land Rover Discovery Firing Order | 4.6L V8 Complete Master Guide (1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2)
π’ Cylinder Numbering & Layout (Visual Reference)
Before applying the firing order, you must know cylinder positions. The engine is viewed from the front (radiator side):
- Left Bank (Driver’s side / LH): 1 (front) β 3 β 5 β 7 (rear)
- Right Bank (Passenger side / RH): 2 (front) β 4 β 6 β 8 (rear)
This numbering follows the Rover/Buick tradition and is crucial for spark plug wire routing, ignition coil connections, and compression testing.
π¬ Live Firing Order Animation & Cylinder Map
Interactive simulation of the 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2 sequence. Press “Animate Firing Order” to see the power stroke travel across cylinders. Each highlight represents the exact moment that cylinder fires.
π§© LEFT BANK (Driver side)
β¬ οΈ Front of vehicle
π§© RIGHT BANK (Passenger side)
β‘οΈ Front of vehicle
π‘ The animation simulates the ignition event. Each cylinder fires every 720Β° of crank rotation, following the exact sequence. This order alternates banks to reduce vibration.
π Why 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2? (Engineering Explanation)
The 2004 Land Rover Discovery V8 uses a cross-plane crankshaft with crank throws spaced at 90Β° intervals. The firing order 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2 was chosen to provide even 90Β° firing intervals (since 720Β°/8 = 90Β°). This eliminates problematic harmonic vibrations. The sequence also alternates firing between left and right banks, improving intake manifold tuning and exhaust scavenging. This specific order is shared with many classic Rover V8 engines and ensures the characteristic burbling idle that Land Rover enthusiasts love.
π οΈ How To Verify / Set The Firing Order (Step by Step)
- Safety first: Disconnect battery negative terminal, let engine cool completely.
- Identify cylinder #1 β front left bank (driver side).
- Locate coil pack outputs: The 2004 Discovery has 4 coils, each serving two cylinders (waste-spark). Typically, coil terminals are marked with cylinder numbers or use factory diagram.
- Connect plug wires according to firing order: Cylinder 1 wire goes to coil tower designated for #1. Then follow sequence: #8, #4, #3, #6, #5, #7, #2. Use the diagram above.
- Double-check: Run engine briefly. If severe misfire occurs, re-check. Use a timing light on each plug wire to confirm flash order matches 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2.
- Clear fault codes with OBD2 scanner after correction.
β Advantages of Correct Factory Firing Order
- Engine smoothness: Even 90Β° firing intervals cancel primary and secondary vibrations.
- Optimal low-end torque: The 4.6L V8 makes peak torque ~3000 RPM, ideal for off-road.
- Fuel efficiency: Correct order ensures complete combustion, avoiding rich-running misfires.
- Longevity: Prevents abnormal bearing wear and crankshaft fatigue.
β Disadvantages (If Order is Wrong or Altered)
- Severe vibration and potential engine mount damage.
- Dangerous backfires that can blow off intake hoses or melt air flow meters.
- Increased emissions and catalytic converter overheating (meltdown risk).
- Confusion during diagnostics β often misdiagnosed as bad coil or fuel injector.
π§ Types of Firing Orders (V8 Comparison)
Other common V8 firing orders for reference:
- Ford 302/351W: 1-5-4-2-6-3-7-8 (HO version: 1-3-7-2-6-5-4-8)
- Chevrolet LS (Gen III+): 1-8-7-2-6-5-4-3 (different crank phasing)
- Flat-plane V8 (Ferrari, some Ford GT350): 1-5-4-8-6-3-7-2 β produces higher RPM but more vibration.
- 2004 Discovery (Rover V8): 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2 β unique cross-plane even-fire.
π©Ί Is It Safe to Change the Firing Order?
ABSOLUTELY NOT SAFE on a stock 2004 Land Rover Discovery. The crankshaft journal positions, camshaft lobe grind, and engine control unit (ECU) are hard-coded for 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2. Changing the ignition order without modifying mechanical hardware would cause piston-to-valve interference, extreme vibration, and immediate engine failure. Aftermarket race engines can have custom orders, but for street-driven Discovery, never deviate.
π Advanced Reference Table: Firing Order vs. Crankshaft Angle
| Firing Step | Cylinder | Crankshaft Angle (Β°) | Bank |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | 0Β° (TDC #1 power) | Left front |
| 2 | 8 | 90Β° | Right rear |
| 3 | 4 | 180Β° | Right (2nd from front) |
| 4 | 3 | 270Β° | Left (2nd) |
| 5 | 6 | 360Β° | Right (3rd) |
| 6 | 5 | 450Β° | Left (3rd) |
| 7 | 7 | 540Β° | Left rear |
| 8 | 2 | 630Β° | Right front |
π Common Symptoms of Wrong Firing Order in Discovery
- Engine cranks but won’t start (backfires through intake).
- Loud popping from exhaust upon acceleration.
- Check Engine Light flashing: P0301, P0308, P0300 etc.
- Extreme shaking at idle, like a “V4” instead of V8.
- Loss of braking assist (vacuum drop due to misfire).
π Use Cases: When You Need This Knowledge
- Spark plug replacement: Wires must be reconnected correctly.
- Engine rebuild or head gasket job: Reinstalling ignition system.
- DIY troubleshooting after a misfire: Confirm cylinder firing sequence.
- Performance upgrades: Aftermarket camshaft installations still require stock firing order but may need timing adjustments.
- Purchasing a used Discovery: Verify if previous owner messed up plug wires.