Electrical/ignition fault?
Discussion
After a 6 hour drive back from Scotland the car died for maybe 1/2 second a few times, I noticed the tacho dropped then the car picked up and ran fine. A faulty coil or ignition amp maybe? Any way of testing these?
Maybe heating the coil and seeing if the resistance changes? Any help gratefully received, cheers, John.
Maybe heating the coil and seeing if the resistance changes? Any help gratefully received, cheers, John.
Aussie John said:
After a 6 hour drive back from Scotland the car died for maybe 1/2 second a few times, I noticed the tacho dropped then the car picked up and ran fine. A faulty coil or ignition amp maybe? Any way of testing these?
Maybe heating the coil and seeing if the resistance changes? Any help gratefully received, cheers, John.
Coil and amp defo worth checkingMaybe heating the coil and seeing if the resistance changes? Any help gratefully received, cheers, John.
I had the same problem when I first had my Chim; turned out to be the distributor...
The sudden drop of the tacho along with the engine dying will be ignition related. The ECU or pump relays will have nothing to do with it.
However, the ignition supply does come from the loopback connector in the loom close to the relays so disturbing the loom in that area may have given an impression that changing the relay solved a problem.
Steve
However, the ignition supply does come from the loopback connector in the loom close to the relays so disturbing the loom in that area may have given an impression that changing the relay solved a problem.
Steve
John,
It does not sound to me like a coil problem as in my experience once a faulty one gets hot it stays faulty until it cools down.
It does seem as Steve says more like an intermittent connection and there are plenty of possibilities in the passenger footwell and or behind the dash to cause problems.
It does not sound to me like a coil problem as in my experience once a faulty one gets hot it stays faulty until it cools down.
It does seem as Steve says more like an intermittent connection and there are plenty of possibilities in the passenger footwell and or behind the dash to cause problems.
Loubaruch said:
...... intermittent connection and there are plenty of possibilities in the passenger footwell and or behind the dash to cause problems.
I doubt it will be behind the dash as most of the engine loom bits are just in the footwell. Prime contender there is the loopback connector (blue plastic jobbie).Far more likely is the wiring up around the coil as it has been getting quite hot for 20 years or so and will be rather crusty.
In answer to the other question no there are not many tests you can carry out on the amp or the coil which is why I have built us a test rig for our workshop so I can prove a faulty part. Coils normally just die. (or worse still we had one dead straight out of the box).
Steve
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