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SignUp Now!The coil pack resistance, all are ~11.4k.The coil pack was really hot and I could smell the plastic or PCB being burnt and when I checked some material fell off and there was a crack in the plastic.
Surprisingly the tower pack resistance is still in spec.
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Do need to remove the coil pack from the CCCI to measure that resistance? Or can you measure it from the input terminals/pins? In looking at the pin-out for the CCCI, I think you would need to pull the coil pack off to check that resistance. I don't see any pins that would allow that measurement.There's also the input resistance and the resistance between the input and output sides of the coilpack.
Do need to remove the coil pack from the CCCI to measure that resistance? Or can you measure it from the input terminals/pins? In looking at the pin-out for the CCCI, I think you would need to pull the coil pack off to check that resistance. I don't see any pins that would allow that measurement.
Why doesn't it matter? Are you saying that the coil pack is fried - not LOL? Someway, somehow, one of the coils got shorted directly to vbat or it was connected to vbat and got shorted to ground. I'm wondering what else in my electrical system got hosed. I will be doing a thorough inspection. I hope my ECM is ok, although I have a spare. I still need to know how it happened. Initially my car was bucking at a certain RPM and then it stalled. It wouldn't start so I got it towed home and when I looked under the hood I initially didn't see anything, but when I touched the coil pack the part where it is cracked was so hot I could touch it and I could smell burnt plastic. I have another know good coil pack and ignition module, however, I am afraid to hook it up. My initial thought was the crank sensor was going and finally gone. So I have a few things to sort out and not a lot of time left because summer is quickly coming to an end for us in the north. In addition this past weekend, my car got hit by a rock, left a nice scratch and dent, when I was driving it home and someone backed into my passenger's side mirror and bending the sheet metal and leaving a small scratch. Unfortunately I didn't see the person do it, some other people witnessed it but didn't get a plate number. Not my weekend.That is correct, to check primary coil resistance you will need to remove the pack and test from the terminals underneath the coil. Not that it matters too much at this point though![]()
Well, I have a known good one to replace it, but I'm wondering it if was the pack itself or if something else caused it. Dave Roland, who knows these cars very well, had my car last week and he just tested my coil pack and said it was good. Because my car was stumbling or bucking at higher speed or RPM. Originally I thought this was a crank sensor issue, now I'm not so sure. However, I will check my crank sensor tonight. I have a portable o-scope and I'm going to crank the car and see what the signal looks like coming from the sensor. Luckily I can access the pin from the connector that goes to the ignition module. I'm also going to check the CAM signal. I hope to capture the signal profile and save it and post it so people will have an idea of what the waveform should look like.that looks like it might have been cut with an arc.
Thankfully, I have a known good replacement. However, I'm scared to hook it up because I don't understand how that happened. I'm going to be doing a lot of double checking of the wiring harness. I have started looking at the vortexbuicks site and it has a lot of good information.Probably a defect in the coil pack, never seen one do that before. I wouldn't trust that coil pack even if you with it connected to the ignition control module pulled around 11.4k ohms off the towers. With my coil pack hooked up i'm seeing 12.44k to 12.46k ohms across all the towers ( all within 0.01k ohms to 0.02 k ohms of each tower pair) and have no burning or smell issues.
If it's heating up that much and you can smell it burning, it'd be wise to get a replacement coil pack. If you can use it for a core charge, that'd be all it really is good for outside of learning how they are built inside.
The bucking you had probably was the spark being disrupted at the coils as the more engine rpm, the more spark is needed.
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Why doesn't it matter? Are you saying that the coil pack is fried - not LOL? Someway, somehow, one of the coils got shorted directly to vbat or it was connected to vbat and got shorted to ground. I'm wondering what else in my electrical system got hosed. I will be doing a thorough inspection. I hope my ECM is ok, although I have a spare. I still need to know how it happened. Initially my car was bucking at a certain RPM and then it stalled. It wouldn't start so I got it towed home and when I looked under the hood I initially didn't see anything, but when I touched the coil pack the part where it is cracked was so hot I could touch it and I could smell burnt plastic. I have another know good coil pack and ignition module, however, I am afraid to hook it up. My initial thought was the crank sensor was going and finally gone. So I have a few things to sort out and not a lot of time left because summer is quickly coming to an end for us in the north. In addition this past weekend, my car got hit by a rock, left a nice scratch and dent, when I was driving it home and someone backed into my passenger's side mirror and bending the sheet metal and leaving a small scratch. Unfortunately I didn't see the person do it, some other people witnessed it but didn't get a plate number. Not my weekend.
I have seen a plug wire jump off and jump fire and do that to a coil , it tries to find a ground and it will look like its welding .