RobbieD
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2007
- Messages
- 3,050
- Reaction score
- 1,965
- Points
- 113
- Location
- Georgia
- Vehicle Year
- 1984,1990,1994
- Make / Model
- Ford
- Transmission
- Manual
- 2WD / 4WD
- 2WD
- My credo
- Toonces drives a Ranger . . . . just not very well.
OK, that's better. And it's acting like it should.My bad.. still had the test light hooked up. Ok key on CEL is illuminated. While cranking it goes away.
Weird; according to the 1988 EVTM the 2.9 doesn't have a check engine light nor a crank sensor.
What's the build date on the door sticker? Ford is bad about changing stuff within a model year.
Anyway, sounds you're back at square 1. If it were me:
1. Revisit the "no spark" symptom. I'd pull a plug and use a jumper cable to ground it to the block, and then turn the motor over and confirm without a shadow of doubt whether spark is present or not.
2. Revisit fuel delivery- key on you hear the pump run, and check for high enough pressure at the fuel regulator (preferably with a gage).
3. As the distributor's been out, I would reconfirm both rotor position AND compression stroke on #1 cylinder. You know #1 is passenger front, right? (I started out as a Chevy guy so this one has bit me in my ass, too).
4. And I would pull the passenger kick trim panel and closely look at the computer ground, which is right next to it. It wouldn't hurt, too, to open the computer and check for blown capacitors or obvious water damage.
I'm sure it's frustrating, but the answer is in there somewhere.