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No Spark No Fuel Pump


Joined
Nov 6, 2025
Messages
2
Points
1
City
Bedford
State - Country
VA - USA
Vehicle Year
1989
Vehicle
Ford Bronco II
Drive
4WD
Engine
2.9 V6
Transmission
Automatic
Total Lift
2
Tire Size
29
Alright, I’ve never done a forum post before but I’m a stuck and I have no idea what to do.

I left my house Saturday and made it about 500 feet before my Bronco died, it seemed like I ran out of gas but I had just put gas in it.

i thought the fuel pump was the issue because it was not coming on when turning the key. I bought a replacement pump and installed it, still a no go.

From there I checked the fuel pump fuse, it was fine, replaced fuel relay, still no shot.

I could jump the fuel pump on by crossing the wires where the relay is.

After attempting to start the vehicle while jumping the fuel pump and it still not starting, I checked for spark, nothing.

I checked directly from the ignition coil, bypassing the distributor completely and there was no spark.

I opened up the computer and checked for bad caps but everything looked fine, I also tried another computer but no dice.

I’m at a complete loss here, I have a multimeter and am more than willing to diagnose but I’m not sure what to check at this point.
 
If you want to throw a part at it, that can be very likely the culprit, buy a TFI module and swap it out. It's mounted on the distributor and is what fires the coil. The computer tells the TFI when to fire, but the TFI module itself has the harder job of driving the voltage to the coil.

P.S. You may need a special socket to get it off. Or grind one of your sockets to make it fit. And it's a little bit hard to get to on these engines since the distributor is in the back.
 
If you want to throw a part at it, that can be very likely the culprit, buy a TFI module and swap it out. It's mounted on the distributor and is what fires the coil. The computer tells the TFI when to fire, but the TFI module itself has the harder job of driving the voltage to the coil.

P.S. You may need a special socket to get it off. Or grind one of your sockets to make it fit. And it's a little bit hard to get to on these engines since the distributor is in the back.
I have replaced the TFI in the past 6 months but I might have a new one lying around so I’ll try that. Would that effect the fuel pump not kicking on?
 
I know decent ones ain't exactly cheap, but I now carry a spare TFI in my Ranger, even though I just recently performed a TFI relocation.
 

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