What is your question?
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What is your question?
replaced coil and that apparently was not he problem. Any suggestions?
2 Replies
please be a professional and tell the owner of the car you cannot fix it and let them take it to a shop that can diagnose it instead of replacing parts til the customer goes broke-thank you
Check the wiring back to the computer. One wire at the coil should have power the other gets grounded by the ECU. See that you have power and continuity back to the ECU on the ground side (have seen mice or previous people working on the car damage wiring). There is a company that independent auto repair shops get their information from, this same information is available inexpensively for people that work on their own cars.. The information is year make and model specific, covering repair procedures, torque specifications, fluid capacities and specifications, service bulletins, component locations, wiring diagrams ect.... Alldata is very easy to navigate http://bit.ly/AllData_Repair_Manuals_Online There is a professional service called Identafix. http://www.identifix.com/info/about_us.htm They only deal with professional repair shops. They are in the Minnesota 651-633-8007 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 651-633-8007 end_of_the_skype_highlighting. Your auto repair shop do all their diagnosis tests, and discuss your problem with a team of professional technicians great service cheap and very bright people. If the repair shop that are repairing your car are stumped this is a great service. This company only deal with automotive repair shops and don't answer questions for the general public but are an amazing knowledge base.