CHEVY 60 FIRING ORDER: DEFINITIVE TECHNICAL ★ ANALYSIS ★
Firing order = order of combustion events. Chevy 60: 1→2→3→4→5→6. It repeats every 2 revs (4-stroke).
Because the crankshaft has 3 crankpins shared by opposing cylinders (1&4, 2&5, 3&6). The 60° bank angle + 120° crank throws create natural balance with sequential firing.
Even-fire (1-2-3-4-5-6) vs Odd-fire (1-6-5-4-3-2) used in some 90° V6. Chevy 60 is even-fire, ensures firing interval precisely 120°.
🔥 LIVE INTERACTIVE FIRING SEQUENCE — Chevy 60 V6
Cylinder numbering: 🔴 Passenger side (right) front→rear: 1 – 3 – 5 | 🔵 Driver side (left) front→rear: 2 – 4 – 6. Distributor rotates clockwise. The animation below visually follows 1 → 2 → 3 → 4 → 5 → 6 cyclically. Watch the highlighted cylinder change along the exact firing order.
🚗 PASSENGER SIDE (Right)
Cylinders 1 · 3 · 5
🚙 DRIVER SIDE (Left)
Cylinders 2 · 4 · 6
Crankshaft has 3 rod journals spaced 120° apart. Cylinder pairs (1&4, 2&5, 3&6) share journals. The sequential order 1,2,3,4,5,6 means each cylinder fires exactly 120° after the previous one, achieving perfect even-firing. This minimizes secondary imbalance and makes the engine naturally smoother than odd-fire designs.
🔧 HOW TO VERIFY & SET FIRING ORDER (Step-by-Step)
- Step 1 – Find #1 TDC: Remove #1 spark plug (passenger front), rotate crankshaft until compression pressure escapes and timing mark aligns 0° TDC.
- Step 2 – Distributor rotor orientation: Remove cap, rotor should point to #1 terminal marking (or to a reference cast mark). If not, re-index oil pump drive.
- Step 3 – Install wires in clockwise order: Terminal #1 → cylinder 1, then clockwise: next terminal → cylinder 2, then cylinder 3, 4, 5, 6.
- Step 4 – Double check with animation: Verify that wire routing matches 1-2-3-4-5-6 sequence looking from above.
- Step 5 – Start engine & use timing light: Flash on #1 should be stable at specified base timing (typically 10° BTDC for 2.8L/3.1L).
Pro tip: For Chevy 60 with distributorless ignition (DIS) on later 3.4L engines? Firing order remains identical, but the ignition coil pack firing order is 1-2-3-4-5-6 in paired waste-spark arrangement (coil A: 1&4, coil B: 2&5, coil C: 3&6).
⚠️ IS IT SAFE TO CHANGE THE FIRING ORDER? (Critical)
Absolutely NOT safe. The engine’s camshaft lobe grind, crankshaft counterweights, and ECU fuel injection timing are all calibrated for 1-2-3-4-5-6. Altering the order would cause valve-to-piston collisions, backfire through intake, severe crankshaft harmonics, and immediate internal damage. Only use OEM specs. If you suspect a swapped firing order, stop the engine immediately and rewire correctly.
✔ Smooth idle & clean throttle response
✔ Reduces torsional vibration on crank
✔ Maximizes volumetric efficiency
✔ Longer spark plug & ignition component life
✔ Better fuel economy & lower emissions
✘ Severe engine misfire & backfire
✘ Hydrocarbon spikes, O2 sensor failure
✘ Catalytic converter meltdown
✘ Bent pushrods / broken pistons
✘ Engine may not start or runs with violent shaking
📊 ADVANCED REFERENCE TABLE: Chevy 60 Firing Specs + Torque
| Parameter | Value / Detail |
|---|---|
| Firing order | 1-2-3-4-5-6 |
| Distributor rotation | Clockwise (viewed from top) |
| Cylinder numbering | Passenger side 1-3-5 (front to rear), Driver side 2-4-6 (front to rear) |
| Crankshaft journal offset | 3 crankpins @ 120° intervals |
| Firing interval (crank angle) | 120° (even-fire) |
| Compression ratio (typical) | 8.9:1 to 9.5:1 depending on variant |
| Ignition timing base | 10° BTDC (with EST bypass connector disconnected) |
| Spark plug gap | 0.045″ (for 3.1L/3.4L) |
| Head bolt torque (stage) | 37 lb-ft + 90° turn (3.4L) |
🛠️ DIAGNOSTIC TROUBLE CODES & SYMPTOMS RELATED TO FIRING ORDER
Incorrect firing order often triggers OBD2 codes P0300 (Random Misfire), P0301–P0306 (Cylinder-specific misfire). On OBD1 systems, flash code 43 (ESC or misfire). Other symptoms: backfiring through intake when accelerating, loss of power under load, engine stalls at idle. Use a non-contact timing light on each cylinder wire: irregular flash pattern indicates wrong order or crossfire.
📌 ENGINE LIST: Which GM cars use Chevy 60 firing order?
- Chevrolet S10 / Blazer / GMC S15 Jimmy (2.8L, 3.1L, 3.4L)
- Chevrolet Camaro & Pontiac Firebird (1985–1992 2.8L, 3.1L V6)
- Chevrolet Beretta / Corsica / Celebrity (2.8L, 3.1L)
- Pontiac Grand Prix / 6000 (3.1L)
- Oldsmobile Cutlass Ciera / Buick Century (V6 60° engines)
- Pontiac Fiero (2.8L) – mid-engine V6
All these share the identical 1-2-3-4-5-6 firing order. When restoring or maintaining any of these vehicles, this reference is essential.
🧠 FIRING ORDER AND ENGINE BALANCE: THE PHYSICS
In a 60° V6 with even firing, the power strokes overlap smoothly, reducing the amplitude of secondary vibrations. The firing order 1-2-3-4-5-6 ensures that the primary couple vector remains small, which is why the engine does not need balance shafts (unlike some 90° V6 designs). This also reduces bearing stress and increases the engine’s durability up to 200k+ miles when maintained. The order was carefully chosen by GM engineers to complement the crankshaft’s split-pin design.