Shannon76
Junior Member
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2017
- Posts
- 14
- Reaction score
- 12
- Location
- Georgia
- First Name
- Shannon
- Truck Year
- 1990
- Truck Model
- 1500
- Engine Size
- 5.7
Hello all and thanks in advance for allowing me on the forum. I am trying to help an elderly widowed lady with her late husbands farm truck and I have hit a brick wall. The truck is all factory with only 28,000 miles.
It's a 1990 C1500. It does not have any spark or fuel when spinning over. It sits a lot and my first thought was that a rodent had chewed a wire into but I have not found any wiring issues so far. Here is a run down of what I have done or confirmed to this point.
1) battery is fully charged and engine is turning over quickly
2) no spark at plug or distributor coil using plug test light
3) no fuel spray in intake when turning over
4) noticed check engine light stayed on with key switch turned on
5) did the A,B jumper at diagnostic port and the only code I got was 12 but the check engine light went out and has since stayed out.
6) I have confirmed there is gas in the fuel tank and I can here the fuel pump cycle when the key switch is turned on.
7) I have not actually checked fuel delivery or pressure to the throttle body at this point. I do not have a gauge and aside from cracking a line open and watching for spray when the switch is turned on (which I don't want to do for safety reasons) I can't think of another way to check supply. I would appreciate any suggestions!!
8) I have replaced the ignition control module, distributor cap, rotor button and ignition coil
9) I have verified power on the 10Ga pink wire at the ignition coil and power on the small pink wire at the ignition coil while the key was both in the run and start positions.
10) When inspecting the distributor it was very corroded inside and the rotary button was a pain to get off. I cleaned it up fairly well and tried testing the pick up coil with an ohm meter with the only test procedures I could find online which were
a) confirmed there was no short from either wire to the body of the distributor
b) checked resistance through the pick up coil by taking a reading across both wire ends. The reading was around 780 ohms. I have read that anything from 500 to 1500 is acceptable. ????
I am going to go ahead and install a new distributor assembly with new pick up coil since this one was so corroded and rusty but I have a feeling that is not going to fix it. Is there anything here that confirms the ECM is good or bad and is there anything I am overlooking. Any way I can test the ECM?? At this point I would have been better off to take it to a shop for her but now it has become personal and I am determined to figure this out. I have seen a lot of top notch feedback from Jims86 and other guys on this subject and I'm hoping y'all can help me get her running. Any help is greatly appreciated!!
It's a 1990 C1500. It does not have any spark or fuel when spinning over. It sits a lot and my first thought was that a rodent had chewed a wire into but I have not found any wiring issues so far. Here is a run down of what I have done or confirmed to this point.
1) battery is fully charged and engine is turning over quickly
2) no spark at plug or distributor coil using plug test light
3) no fuel spray in intake when turning over
4) noticed check engine light stayed on with key switch turned on
5) did the A,B jumper at diagnostic port and the only code I got was 12 but the check engine light went out and has since stayed out.
6) I have confirmed there is gas in the fuel tank and I can here the fuel pump cycle when the key switch is turned on.
7) I have not actually checked fuel delivery or pressure to the throttle body at this point. I do not have a gauge and aside from cracking a line open and watching for spray when the switch is turned on (which I don't want to do for safety reasons) I can't think of another way to check supply. I would appreciate any suggestions!!
8) I have replaced the ignition control module, distributor cap, rotor button and ignition coil
9) I have verified power on the 10Ga pink wire at the ignition coil and power on the small pink wire at the ignition coil while the key was both in the run and start positions.
10) When inspecting the distributor it was very corroded inside and the rotary button was a pain to get off. I cleaned it up fairly well and tried testing the pick up coil with an ohm meter with the only test procedures I could find online which were
a) confirmed there was no short from either wire to the body of the distributor
b) checked resistance through the pick up coil by taking a reading across both wire ends. The reading was around 780 ohms. I have read that anything from 500 to 1500 is acceptable. ????
I am going to go ahead and install a new distributor assembly with new pick up coil since this one was so corroded and rusty but I have a feeling that is not going to fix it. Is there anything here that confirms the ECM is good or bad and is there anything I am overlooking. Any way I can test the ECM?? At this point I would have been better off to take it to a shop for her but now it has become personal and I am determined to figure this out. I have seen a lot of top notch feedback from Jims86 and other guys on this subject and I'm hoping y'all can help me get her running. Any help is greatly appreciated!!