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#1
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Hello.
The car is 93' 300E 2.8 California version with 83,000 miles. I'm the second owner. I've had pretty bad engine misfire since yesterday, so I checked the code. Here below are the codes I got: Onboard LED: None Pin 8 : 23 Pin 14: 11 Then I checked the ignition coils because I suspected them. Fortunately, I was right. #1 ignition coil seemed bad. Here are the resistance values: #1 Primary 0.7 Ohm, Secondary 0.575 MOhm (not K) #2 Primary 0.7 Ohm, Secondary 6.8 KOhm #3 Primary 0.7 Ohm, Secondary 6.8 KOhm Now, I have a question. The OBD module told me #2 ignition coil was wrong, but I got a different result. Can anybody explain? |
#2
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Do a recount ..
Or...clear codes and move coil and wait for DM to pick up the known bad coils position. You may have a wire harness problem.
__________________
A Dalton |
#3
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I moved the problematic coil to different position then the DM picked the coil correctly.
Replaced the coil with a new one then the problem was gone. I found the coil was not completely gone but it varied its secondary resistence along with the temperature. The coil was original with a blue sticker on it. The good news is this fix fixed the other problem I posted years ago. The post # is 160385 (Where does this strange noise come from?). Thanks Arthur. |
#4
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Prove of the capabilities of the OBD fault detection system...
Very good. PS... for 104 waste spark owners, it is always those blue stickered coils to watch for..
__________________
A Dalton |
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