OK guys. It feels like day 792, and I keep doing the same thing. LOL.
In all reality I spoke with a coworker who used to be the head tech at a Mercedes garage, just to get more input and ideas. Not sure if this helps or not. He suggested as it only happens when load is present at stop to get the truck to operating temperature, crank the A/C, and turn the steering wheel lock to lock to load the system with power steering and A/C and see if it drops in RPM and stalls, or not. His though was that if it did it would clearly indicate an ignition issue, if not he was thinking idle air control, or that the PCM is not detecting load from the transmission. I did this and RPM dropped minimally if at all.
Next I smoked the engine again (through the brake booster hose) just to make sure, and nothing, except out the air intake opening. I then went and while watching the live RPM on my scan tool started and let the truck come to temperature, then disconnected each coil 1 at a time for about 45 seconds, then let the truck rebound and went to the next. All 8 coils responded the same, none more or less than the others.
Next I took one of my Motocraft coils that had .9 ohms resistance between the 2 pins, and started with cylinder 1. Swapped it out, started the truck and placed into R, RPMs dropped to about 570 with strong vibration again. Removed the Motorcraft and reinstalled the new accel coins and went to the next cylinder. Did this for all 8 cylinders, with the same result on each cylinder.
I cannot figure out what is happening. Can any body advise what your RPM's are at operating temperature, at stop in drive or reverse? Just for comparison.
Any ideas.