Trying to figure out why my fuel pump is not getting any power and determined the power for the pump comes directly off the coil. The voltage leaving the relay panel is ~12V, but coming into the coil is only about 2-3V - that is with the wire disconnected - with it connected to the coil it is only ~.3V. Is this right? How do I determine if the coil is bad? How much for a new one?
Your wiring has been hacked on, as the fuel pump power normally comes off a dedicated relay on the relay board. Is this a carb'd car?
The coil shouldn't affect power unless the wiring was done very oddly. The fuel pump power wire should connect to the same post on the coil as the coil + power. Where are you measuring voltage? What's your ground?
The fuel pump power does seem to come from a dedicated relay on the relay board (and I have not traced the wire?) but when checking the voltage at the coil it seems to have dropped? Is this possible? I was using the engine tin as ground. The car is stcock L-jet as far as I know.
The coild does affect the voltage - does that tell you anything? The fuel pump power wire does connect to the same one as the relay. Why is the coil in that circuit?
BTW - I left the ignition on and the coild was very hot - is this normal?
IIRC the L-jet fuel pump only runs when the "flapper" in the intake is moved by either air or you . When you turn the key ON I don't think it runs..You MUST crank it to get flow.
QUOTE |
do not run power for the fuel-pump off the coil! |
QUOTE |
The fuel pump power wire should connect to the same post on the coil as the coil + power. |
QUOTE (vesnyder @ Oct 3 2005, 11:03 AM) |
The fuel pump power does seem to come from a dedicated relay on the relay board (and I have not traced the wire?) but when checking the voltage at the coil it seems to have dropped? Is this possible? I was using the engine tin as ground. The car is stcock L-jet as far as I know. The coild does affect the voltage - does that tell you anything? The fuel pump power wire does connect to the same one as the relay. Why is the coil in that circuit? BTW - I left the ignition on and the coild was very hot - is this normal? |
Bondo - Thanks for jumping in. D-Jet, that's right! The voltage is coming out of the relay panel?
My coil + comment was directed at making it work IF you had a carb'd car and IF you really were trying to pull fuel pump power off the coil (which, SirAndy notwithstanding, is a common practice). Since you have D-Jet, you can ignore this comment.
With D-Jet, the fuel pump power is switched through a dedicated relay on the relay board, which is itself switched by the ECU. Power for the coil also comes from a relay on the relay board, which is switched by the ignition switch. If your coil and fuel pump are on the same relay, something is wrong.
When you turn on the key, the fuel pump should come on for a short while (1-2 seconds), then it will turn OFF until the engine is running. So, if you've switched on the key and are measuring fuel pump voltage with the engine off, then it's no surprise the fuel pump isn't running. Aside from the brief prime pulse, the ECU ensures the fuel pump is off while the engine isn't running. If you suspect the fuel pump isn't working at all, then you can try to hot-wire the fuel pump directly from the battery just to see if the pump works. If the pump works but you can't start the car, you need to start the usual no-start diagnostic, which usually should start with the ignition. You should have +12 volts between the coil + and the engine tin with the key turned on. If you don't, there's your no start problem, and it's mostly likely the main relay, or the ignition switch, or the wiring between them.
it's not a good idea at all....and you also eliminate the ECU controls as well, imagine the safety issues there....especially in the event of a wreck or something..........
b
Looking at the wiring diagram, the fuel pump power comes from the relay panel, and connects to the coil - and then powers the pump. This does not emilinate the relay or the fuse from the circuit?
lapuwali - thanks for the details on when the fuel pump comes on! My analysis that the pump is not getting any power is not vaild?
The coil is not powered by a relay--it is powered by the ignition switch. The power going to the coil is used to trigger the relay for the power supply to the fuel injection, and that power is one of the two things that triggers the relay that sends power to the fuel pump.
D-jet fuel pump troubleshooting:
http://www.914fan.net/fuelpump.html Article by Bill Williams
http://members.rennlist.com/pbanders/FPChecklist.htm Flowcharts by Brad Anders
--DD
I didn't say, or mean to suggest, it was good practice to run the fuel pump off the coil, only that it's commonly done.
Just trying to help solve this one problem, not re-engineer the wiring completely.
My mistake on the coil not being powered by the relay in stock form. I assumed the 25A fuse and the associated relay
on the relay board ran the coil.
Back to the original topic...
Is there a dedicated wire on your car from the coil + terminal directly to the fuel pump? If not, then we need to back up and
find out exactly what your problem actually is. If so, then someone has hacked up your wiring, and all bets are off on
what *should* happen v. what's actually happening on your car.
I do not think I was looking at the corect wiring diagram. There is not a wire from the coil to the pump? I think the fuel pump is wired into the relay and fuse on the relay panel. I checked the pump while I had somebody turn the car over and still did not get any power - shoudl I assume that there is an issue at the relay board? Will hopefully do some more checking to ensure it is the fuse/relay at the panel?
Sorry for all the confusion!
It is working, but who know for how long? I took an external 12V source and hooked it up to the fuel pump to make sure it was in facet the fuel pump. The car started right up! So at least I know it is the fuel pump. Reconnect the wires and try it again just for grins - and it runs fine?? WTH?? Any ideas? Is it a fluke, and when I get more than ten miles from my house is it going to strand me again?
I can tell what kind of car this is going to be!!
QUOTE (vesnyder @ Oct 3 2005, 03:16 PM) |
I can tell what kind of car this is going to be!! |
Glad you got it running!
Something worth mentioning.. as a 73 it originally had the fuel pump by the engine. Someone who owned it before me moved it up front by the master cylinder. Something in that wiring could also be causing a problem, since it's non-stock. Worth a look at least.
QUOTE (bondo @ Oct 3 2005, 03:59 PM) |
Something worth mentioning.. as a 73 it originally had the fuel pump by the engine. Someone who owned it before me moved it up front by the master cylinder. Something in that wiring could also be causing a problem, since it's non-stock. Worth a look at least. |
Rock on!
Tip #12,943
Buy 2 relays. Throw one in the glove box, and swap one out with the fuel pump relay.
Now, remove the cover from the old pump relay, and put that in a lil baggie, in the glove box. This is your test relay.
With the cap removed, and the relay in place, you can acctuate it with your finger, press- wirrrr.... press- wirrrrr..... if the ignition doesn't acctuate the relay, but you can manually, it's the switch voltage not arriving at the relay..
I recently had THE EXACT same problem, that I chased for two years, not two full years... but over two ye.. nevermind!
Rebuilt relay board... gone.. gone, gone, gone.
M
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