2006 Dodge Durango Firing Order: 3.7L V6, 4.7L & 5.7L HEMI V8 – with Live Animation, Torque Specs & Diagnosis
🎯 2. Engine Specifications & Cylinder Numbering
3.7L PowerTech V6
Firing order: 1-6-5-4-3-2
Cylinder layout: Left bank (1-3-5) front to rear; Right bank (2-4-6) front to rear.
Coil pattern: Individual COP, order controlled by PCM.
4.7L Magnum V8
Firing order: 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2
Cylinders: Left (driver) 1-3-5-7; Right (passenger) 2-4-6-8.
Crossplane crank: 90° firing intervals.
5.7L HEMI V8
Firing order: 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2 (identical to 4.7L)
MDS (Multi-Displacement): Deactivates cylinders 1,4,6,7 under light load; but firing order remains unchanged when active.
Note: Coil numbering matches cylinder numbers.
📌 Cylinder Numbering Diagram (Front View)
- V8 (4.7L / 5.7L): Driver side (left): front → 1, 3, 5, 7 Passenger side (right): front → 2, 4, 6, 8
- V6 (3.7L): Driver side: 1,3,5 Passenger side: 2,4,6
🚗 LEFT BANK (Driver side)
1 · 3 · 5 · 7
🚙 RIGHT BANK (Passenger)
2 · 4 · 6 · 8
🔧 3. How to Check & Verify Firing Order (Step-by-Step)
How to check firing order on 2006 Dodge Durango:
- Identify cylinder numbering – Use the diagram above; look for stamped numbers near intake ports.
- Inspect Coil-On-Plug (COP) connectors – Each coil is labeled (often “1”–“8” or “1”–“6”). Ensure they are not swapped.
- Use a diagnostic scan tool – Read live misfire counters (Mode $06 data). Example: P0303 indicates cylinder 3 misfire.
- Test with a noid light or oscilloscope – Confirm the PCM fires coils in the correct sequence.
- Manual verification – Remove all coils and spark plugs, rotate engine manually by hand, and feel compression strokes; sequence matches firing order.
Pro tip: For the 2006 Durango 4.7L/5.7L, cylinders 1,3,5,7 (driver side) fire in order: 1 → 3 → 5 → 7? Not exactly. The actual order is 1 → 8 → 4 → 3 → 6 → 5 → 7 → 2. So the driver side receives pulses at cylinders 1,3,5,7 but interleaved with passenger bank.
📊 4. Advantages & Disadvantages of OEM Firing Order
✅ Advantages
- Reduces engine vibration & harmonics
- Extends crankshaft bearing life
- Optimizes torque delivery across RPM
- Minimizes exhaust backpressure pulses
- Allows smooth MDS operation in HEMI
⚠️ Disadvantages (if altered)
- Severe misfiring and power loss
- Risk of backfire damaging intake manifold
- Catalytic converter meltdown
- Failed emissions test
- Potential piston ring damage
🛡️ 5. Is It Safe To Change the Firing Order? (Absolutely NOT)
Is it safe? — No. The 2006 Dodge Durango engine control module (ECM) is programmed with fixed cylinder firing windows. Changing firing order (e.g., swapping ignition coil harnesses) will cause engine destruction. Under no circumstances should you modify the firing order. Even performance camshafts must preserve the original order, only altering valve timing. Safety comes first: always verify before cranking.
🧰 6. Firing Order & Common Repair Scenarios
- Spark plug replacement: Always replace one coil at a time to avoid mixing firing order. Mark each coil with cylinder number using tape.
- Engine rebuild: After timing chain replacement, confirm piston position relative to camshaft. The firing order must match camshaft lobe phasing.
- Misfire diagnosis: If P0300 random misfire occurs, check the firing order integrity before swapping injectors.
- Ignition coil replacement: Use OEM coils or high-quality aftermarket. Mismatched coils can cause weak spark but will not change order. However, wiring harness damage may scramble order.
📐 7. Cylinder Firing Interval & Crankshaft Angles
On the 5.7L HEMI (crossplane V8), the crankshaft throws are arranged such that a firing event occurs every 90° of rotation. The order 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2 alternates between left and right banks continuously, which cancels out primary rocking couples. The 3.7L V6 uses a 120° evenly spaced crankshaft with the order 1-6-5-4-3-2 providing an even firing pattern that is intrinsically balanced.
| Engine | Cylinder firing interval (crank angle) | Bank firing pattern |
|---|---|---|
| 3.7L V6 | 120° | Left-Right-Left-Right-Left-Right |
| 4.7L / 5.7L V8 | 90° | L-R-R-L-R-L-R-L |
🔩 8. Related Torque Specs (Spark Plug & Coil)
- Spark plug torque (3.7L, 4.7L, 5.7L): 20 N·m (15 ft-lbs) – do not over-torque.
- Ignition coil hold-down bolt: 8 N·m (70 in-lbs).
- Always apply anti-seize on spark plug threads (aluminum heads) and dielectric grease inside coil boots.
❓ 9. Expanded FAQ – 20+ Essential Questions Answered
A: Yes, all Chrysler 3.7L PowerTech V6 engines use 1-6-5-4-3-2.
A: 2006 model uses coil-on-plug – no distributor.
A: It will cause no spark or incorrect timing, but the firing order sequence remains physically wired. The PCM uses crank sensor to determine when to fire each coil according to stored order.
A: Rotate crankshaft damper to 0° mark; both valves on cylinder 1 will be closed (compression stroke). Then the next cylinder in firing order (cylinder 8 for V8) should be on its power stroke after 90° crank rotation.
A: No, MDS deactivates lifters on cylinders 1,4,6,7, but the spark plug still fires in the designated order (though no combustion). The order itself never changes.
A: Cylinder 5 is the third cylinder on driver side (1-3-5-7 from front). Check firing order connection to cylinder 5.
A: Better low-end torque predictability, prevents stalling on inclines.
A: 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2 is universal.
A: Possibly. Double-check coil connectors: a common mistake is swapping cylinders 4 and 6 harness. Follow the firing order sequence.
A: Indirectly, yes – due to reduced engine power and erratic torque converter lockup.
A: Use an ignition probe light connected to each coil while cranking; observe the pattern according to order.
A: High risk – unburned fuel destroys cats, pistons can overheat, bent valves from backfire.