cyborgv1
Member
I've been having stalling issues for a while now, it used to go a few miles, to a few hundred without stalling. It would stall when the tfi was cold to the touch, and hot enough that I didn't think of touching anything.
I replaced the rotor, distributor cap, wires, plugs, relays, map, and the ignition coil. I also checked all the wiring possible, fixing any suspect issues I came across. I found a few suspect wires, mainly on the harness for the alternator, and a few solder joints where the insulation tape crumbled at the touch.
My spark is not blue, and before changing the coil, it was a very thin orange spark out of the coil. Replacing the coil produced a very fat orange spark, and got the truck started and home.
It was still stalling out, but seemed to be more fuel related as it would sputter and stall instead of just going completely dead. I cleaned the throttle body, upper intake, and the IAC. At the fuel rail, I'll get a short spurt of gas, and nothing more. I replaced the fuel filter, and the high pressure pump since it didn't sound like it used to. The fuel rail still acted the same so I checked with the gas tank cap off, and it produces a steady stream that will hit the hood for several seconds. I'll check the venting issue on the tank later.
Went to try and start and I get a single spark from the coil. One spark and nothing. I replaced the TFI with a new one since the two I have all seem suspect to me. The new TFI still produces one spark.
I replaced the TFI because I thought I might have fried it while replacing the pump. I forgot I had the ignition on a time or two, and yanked the battery cables.
Just to be sure, I've checked almost all the wiring and all the grounds I can find, and I'll go over it again when the truck is at my house. All the exposed metal checks out at the highest .3 ohms (cheap meter, and leads) when checked to the disconnected negative battery lead. I've also checked for rotation of the distributor, there's no up and down, or side to side play either.
My worst fear is that I might have fried the computer. I get plenty of the fat orange spark with the spout "pill" removed. I was able to get it to start once while checking a random spark plug cable for spark. Fuel pumps turn on everytime, and after attempting to start, I can run the pumps using the test connector so I know the relays are all good.
My current symptoms now are a single spark, and no tach response (doesn't even twitch) with the SPOUT plug in. Once removed, I get good tach response (600 rpms) , and a thick orange spark. Codes for KOEO are 11-1-11. The last known KOER code I got was 25, knock test failed. Could be an error on my part to hit the throttle at the right time.
As far as I can tell, it can either be the hall effect, or the ecc. I've pulled the computer and the harness looks very clean, and new. No corrosion inside the computer, or on the connectors.
Does the SPOUT "bypass" the hall effect?
What are the chances of damaging the ECC from yanking battery leads?
I replaced the rotor, distributor cap, wires, plugs, relays, map, and the ignition coil. I also checked all the wiring possible, fixing any suspect issues I came across. I found a few suspect wires, mainly on the harness for the alternator, and a few solder joints where the insulation tape crumbled at the touch.
My spark is not blue, and before changing the coil, it was a very thin orange spark out of the coil. Replacing the coil produced a very fat orange spark, and got the truck started and home.
It was still stalling out, but seemed to be more fuel related as it would sputter and stall instead of just going completely dead. I cleaned the throttle body, upper intake, and the IAC. At the fuel rail, I'll get a short spurt of gas, and nothing more. I replaced the fuel filter, and the high pressure pump since it didn't sound like it used to. The fuel rail still acted the same so I checked with the gas tank cap off, and it produces a steady stream that will hit the hood for several seconds. I'll check the venting issue on the tank later.
Went to try and start and I get a single spark from the coil. One spark and nothing. I replaced the TFI with a new one since the two I have all seem suspect to me. The new TFI still produces one spark.
I replaced the TFI because I thought I might have fried it while replacing the pump. I forgot I had the ignition on a time or two, and yanked the battery cables.
Just to be sure, I've checked almost all the wiring and all the grounds I can find, and I'll go over it again when the truck is at my house. All the exposed metal checks out at the highest .3 ohms (cheap meter, and leads) when checked to the disconnected negative battery lead. I've also checked for rotation of the distributor, there's no up and down, or side to side play either.
My worst fear is that I might have fried the computer. I get plenty of the fat orange spark with the spout "pill" removed. I was able to get it to start once while checking a random spark plug cable for spark. Fuel pumps turn on everytime, and after attempting to start, I can run the pumps using the test connector so I know the relays are all good.
My current symptoms now are a single spark, and no tach response (doesn't even twitch) with the SPOUT plug in. Once removed, I get good tach response (600 rpms) , and a thick orange spark. Codes for KOEO are 11-1-11. The last known KOER code I got was 25, knock test failed. Could be an error on my part to hit the throttle at the right time.
As far as I can tell, it can either be the hall effect, or the ecc. I've pulled the computer and the harness looks very clean, and new. No corrosion inside the computer, or on the connectors.
Does the SPOUT "bypass" the hall effect?
What are the chances of damaging the ECC from yanking battery leads?