P0300 on a 2017 Chevrolet Equinox

Random or Multiple Cylinder Misfire

Severity: high Do not drive Compact SUV 2015-2019 Chevrolet Equinox

What does P0300 mean on a 2017 Chevrolet Equinox?

P0300 is set when the engine control module's misfire monitor detects that combustion is failing in more than one cylinder, or that misfires are occurring randomly across cylinders rather than being isolated to a single one. The misfire monitor works by measuring tiny variations in crankshaft rotational speed — a missed combustion event causes the crankshaft to decelerate by a detectable amount. When the ECM cannot attribute the event to a single cylinder, it sets P0300.

Symptoms on a 2017 Chevrolet Equinox

Likely causes on a 2017 Chevrolet Equinox

  1. Worn or fouled spark plugs (all cylinders due for replacement) Most common
    Estimated repair: $60– $350

    Especially common past 80,000 miles on platinum or iridium plugs.

  2. Failing ignition coils — coil-on-plug systems Most common
    Estimated repair: $80– $600
  3. Vacuum leak causing lean misfire across all cylinders Common
    Estimated repair: $80– $500
  4. Low fuel pressure (weak pump, clogged filter) Common
    Estimated repair: $80– $900
  5. Clogged or leaking fuel injectors Occasional
    Estimated repair: $150– $1,500
  6. Carbon-fouled intake valves (direct-injection engines) Occasional
    Estimated repair: $400– $900
  7. Low engine compression (worn rings, burnt valve, head gasket) Rare
    Estimated repair: $1,500– $5,000
  8. Failed crankshaft or camshaft position sensor causing timing issues Rare
    Estimated repair: $150– $550

How to diagnose this on a 2017 Chevrolet Equinox

  1. Pull every code, including pending and freeze-frame data

    Read all stored, pending, and permanent codes. Note which cylinder(s) show misfire counts in mode 6 or the manufacturer-specific misfire PID. Freeze-frame data tells you the engine load, RPM, and temperature when the misfire occurred — critical for narrowing down the cause.

    Tools: Scan tool with mode 6 / misfire counters

  2. Swap ignition coils between cylinders

    On a coil-on-plug system, move the coil from a suspect cylinder to a known-good cylinder. Clear codes, drive, and re-read. If the misfire follows the coil, the coil is bad. If it stays in the same cylinder, the coil is not the cause.

    Tools: Socket set, Torque wrench (for plug torque on reassembly)

  3. Inspect spark plugs visually

    Remove all spark plugs. Compare their appearance. A black, sooty plug indicates a rich condition for that cylinder. A wet, fuel-smelling plug means no spark or no compression on that cylinder. White or blistered ceramic indicates an overly lean condition. Replace the full set if any are out of spec or past service interval.

    Tools: Spark plug socket, Extension and ratchet, Anti-seize and torque wrench

  4. Test fuel pressure under load

    Connect a fuel pressure gauge and observe pressure at idle, snap-throttle, and steady cruise. A weak pump may hold pressure at idle but drop under load — the time pattern matters as much as the absolute reading.

    Tools: Fuel pressure gauge

  5. Perform a cylinder compression or relative-compression test

    If misfires persist after ignition and fuel system work, perform a compression test on each cylinder, or use a scan tool's relative compression function. Cylinders more than 15 % below the rest indicate a mechanical problem (rings, valves, or head gasket).

    Tools: Compression tester, Scan tool with relative compression

Common fixes

About the 2015-2019 Chevrolet Equinox

The 2015-2019 Chevrolet Equinox was commonly sold with the following powertrains: 1.5L Turbo I4, 2.4L I4, 2.0L Turbo I4. Common trims include L, LS, LT, Premier.

Is it safe to drive with a P0300?

If the Check Engine Light is flashing, no — pull over and tow the vehicle. A flashing light means raw fuel is reaching the catalytic converter, where it will combust and destroy the substrate within minutes. Replacement catalysts are $600–$2,400. Driving home is not worth that risk.

If the light is steady, the misfire is intermittent or minor. The vehicle can usually be driven short distances to a repair shop, but every mile adds risk of catalyst damage.

Why P0300 with no cylinder-specific code is harder to diagnose

P0301 through P0308 narrow the problem to a single cylinder. P0300 alone means the misfire is jumping cylinders or affecting all of them — which points to a systemic cause: ignition system, fuel system, vacuum, or mechanical. Always start with mode 6 misfire counts to see if any cylinder is statistically worse, even if no per-cylinder code has matured yet.

When to suspect compression vs. ignition vs. fuel

Symptom patternLikely root cause
Cold start misfire that clears warmCarbon-fouled valves or worn plugs
Misfire only under loadWeak ignition coils or low fuel pressure
Misfire only at idleVacuum leak or dirty injectors
Misfire on the same cylinder despite coil/plug swapCompression problem (valve or rings)
Random multi-cylinder misfire after fuel-upBad fuel

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