Hi
@jacksonemily03 ,
Welcome to the Forum and sorry to hear about your Cherokee issue:
1. When you mean you
replaced the wire, do you mean you cut/soldered a new wire length and/or connector on? Note, you cannot 'swap' the wire that connects to one coil on one cyl. with another. That would absolutely cause a misfire. Each wire
must go to its pre-assigned coil pack. When you examined the wire, any evidence of fraying, insulation being worn etc.?
2. I noticed on your Sales order you have the 2.4 engine. This could also just be an issue with the "brick" inside the 2.4 MultiAir engine. It uses a oil pressure-fired solenoid to open the intake valve. If the solenoid in cyl 3 is defective or say, oil debris was caught in the passage of the MultiAir unit of cyl 3, it would not fire to open the intake valve causing a misfire. Quesiton...is this the only code or were there additional ones? Unfortunately, the solenoids in the MultiAir unit (called the "brick") cannot be replaced individually. The resolution is to replace the brick assembly.
3. Your 2.4 doesn't have a conventional camshaft for the intake so it's unlikely you have any camshaft or similar issues going on however, you mentioned you cleaned your injector. How did you do this? Do you mean injector cleaner in the fuel tank? If so, I would try swapping the #3 injector with either 1, 2 or 4 and see if the problem travels. If so, the injector is bad and needs to be replaced. Note, injector cleaner takes time to clean injectors chemically so if it's already clogged this method may not work. The injector may be more likely, failing electrically (and injector cleaner wouldn't help an electrically failing injector ). Another option before moving injectors is to Ohm them out. If #3 has an Ohm reading wayyy different than 1, 2 or 4, there's your problem.
4. Lastly (fair warning), a misfire can always be the result of low cylinder compression which is can indicate a serious leak condition in a cylinder. This usually isn't the case unless something else happened e.g. ran without sufficient oil or coolant and engine overheated or vehicle was ridden "hard". It's not a common issue but as a full disclosure, I'm mentioning it. If you examine your coolant in the bottle, do you see any evidence of oil mixing (e.g. an oily sheen). If you check the oil on your dipstick, does it look like normal oil or does it have a brown "milkshake" look to it? Any white or blue smoke from the exhaust pipe? These are symptoms of a cylinder problem. However for now, I'd focus on the the common things for the 2.4 engine.. the injector and brick to resolve this.