You know sparky, i thought i was being nice, and give you a heads up. But I see that your a little kid that cant take advice. I PM you again, my account is now up and running. If you want to play, you have to pay. I'll also post my PM so as all to see. Again, I thought I was helping you but I guess not.
PM to sparky:
Kill my fav tree? thats funny. Didn't see where you replaced the filter. My apologies for that. I am what you call one of those grease monkeys. Been in business with my father since I could remember. You have to go to a place you can trust. We are not all out to take your money. We do have a business and need to survive, but charge fairly. I hollowed out my cat a long time ago. So I'm no tree hugger. I've also built and raced muscle cars, and work on upper class cars. All vehicles are the same unless its a diesel. Internal combustion engines all run the same way. Air, fuel, spark. If you have the means to check all these out, you will solve your problems, if not, you are wasting your time, and pulling out your hair in the meantime. Let alone shotgunning by throwing everything everyone on the interet says. Check your fuel pressure, must be to specs. If it is too low: clogged filter, faulty delivery pump, pressure regulator, vapor lock in tank. Check spark. Just because you did a tune-up doesn't mean that the ignition system is ok. Put a scope on the ignition system, and see if you have proper output voltage to the plugs. Check for vacuum leaks at manifold with carb cleaner. Open throttle body, clean out all gunk. Its definatly clogged with carbon (jeep common prob). If all those check out, then check your air fuel ratio with meter on O2 sensor. If that is ok, go to engine. Compression and leak down tests. This is the proper way to diagnose the vehicle, not jump the gun and throw parts at it. Next time for cat test. drill a small hole before the cat and have someone snap throttle with you holding hose with pressure gauge at hole. Any back pressure and you have exhaust/cat problems, if its ok, put a rivet in the hole to reseal it. Takes 5 minutes and you checked the cat. If it isn't the problem, you can focus on finding the problem, not ripping the car apart. These are all things a good reputible mechanic/tech knows. Your problem would be diagnosed in one day, and probably back out on the road. You need all the proper tools though which your average person doesn't have. To learn, purchase the repair manual for your year jeep from the dealer, the same they use. Read it, study it, know it, only then will you be able to diagnose your problem. Go to your local 4X4 shop. They know these vehicles inside out. Their labor rate is usually lower. Good Luck
Anyway, I'll see you sometime on the trail...oooops, I forgot you dont have a reliable rig.
GuySmiley