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does your ge use the same ignitor as the gte?
i got one for sale if its the same thing might be worth a shot?
http://www.trademe.co.nz/Browse/Listing ... =622417946
Crucible wrote:Sounds like your testing is on track, run a test light on neg side of coil to ground, it should pulse when cranking.
If the test light stays lit (solid) the igniter is at fault and not switching.
Toyota external igniters are usually very reliable,
but must be bolted on correctly as the body is the earth.
My guess would be more towards the sensor in the dist.
How many wires from the dist?
The start signal fault code appears when you crash start a manual car,
and randomly a times but should not really pose an issue.
Crucible wrote:I should mention that the ignitor needs a signal from dist to switch. So if the test light doesnt pulse the ignitor OR dist can be at fault.
Sounds like the distributor is more likely to be the fault from other peoples experiances.
the thing is though,
if there is no signal from the ecu to the igniter,
the coil negative should stay at 12v not 0v.
0v indicates that power is not coming out of the coil,
or that the igniter is holding it to ground which is very uncommon.
Can you unplug the igniter without unplugging the coil?
do that and you should have 12v on both coil terminals.
One thing to note is that you cannot measure the signal coming out of the CAS with $5 Multimeter with any certainty. The signal is very low. The ECU on other hand will send a clear signal to the igniter, so you can measure that with a multimeter (do not measure it with test light!)
DLF wrote:I pulled the connector off the igniter and put an analogue meter on the IGt wire (trigger wire from ECU to the igniter). Then cranked the engine for 3 seconds twice and had no pulses showing on the meter. On the third try, I saw pulses of around 2v on the analogue meter. I tried it again a couple of times more and again got nothing on the meter.
So that looks like its the distributor?
matt dunn wrote:DLF wrote:I pulled the connector off the igniter and put an analogue meter on the IGt wire (trigger wire from ECU to the igniter). Then cranked the engine for 3 seconds twice and had no pulses showing on the meter. On the third try, I saw pulses of around 2v on the analogue meter. I tried it again a couple of times more and again got nothing on the meter.
So that looks like its the distributor?
Not so,
The ECU will only send out 4 pulses, (maybe 6 on a 6 cylinder) on the IGT wire without getting the IGF signal before it stops sending the IGT signal,
so testing it disconnected is a waste of time.
DLF wrote:
So for clarity, if the dist was working properly and the igniter was disconnected, it would send a number of pulses every time the engine was cranked?
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