Hard to tell for sure but I seem to detect that it's only running on one cylinder sometimes maybe. (or one cylinder is weaker) You can judge such by rpm drop as each cylinder is disabled, comparing one to the other.
You can easily confirm such by sliding back the rubber boots on both spark plugs so as to see the metal ends while on the spark plug and while the engine is running at idle ground each spark plug wire one at a time using a long blade screwdriver. If grounding one spark plug wire immediately starts killing the engine that is the ONE CYLINDER that it's using to run.
The cylinder that makes no difference when it's spark plug wire is grounded is the dead or weak cylinder.
Lightly lubing the spark plug wire itself just above the boot helps when sliding the boot back. (another way is to allow a small solid wire to stick out of the boot and ground the wire while it's running.
Just because you see a spark at both plugs IS NOT sure indicator that both cylinders are actually producing power. The other way is to use a fuse puller and momentarily pull the spark plug wire off the plug. I do not like to pull a plug wire for testing while running, I prefer grounding but sometimes I have no other choice.
You can easily confirm such by sliding back the rubber boots on both spark plugs so as to see the metal ends while on the spark plug and while the engine is running at idle ground each spark plug wire one at a time using a long blade screwdriver. If grounding one spark plug wire immediately starts killing the engine that is the ONE CYLINDER that it's using to run.
The cylinder that makes no difference when it's spark plug wire is grounded is the dead or weak cylinder.
Lightly lubing the spark plug wire itself just above the boot helps when sliding the boot back. (another way is to allow a small solid wire to stick out of the boot and ground the wire while it's running.
Just because you see a spark at both plugs IS NOT sure indicator that both cylinders are actually producing power. The other way is to use a fuse puller and momentarily pull the spark plug wire off the plug. I do not like to pull a plug wire for testing while running, I prefer grounding but sometimes I have no other choice.