1989 dakota and crankshaft position sensor
#1
1989 dakota and crankshaft position sensor
I have the truck which is a 89--2.5 L. where is the crankshaft and cam position sensors? are they in the distributor? if so why do they go bad? we replaced those about 2 years ago.
this truck went from running to running rough to NOT running all within a week.
thanks in advance for all the help, I'm almost bald from this project.
bob
this truck went from running to running rough to NOT running all within a week.
thanks in advance for all the help, I'm almost bald from this project.
bob
#2
For 1988, the factory service manual mentions neither part, what the 88 2.5 had is a Hall Effect Sensor in the distributor that serves as a spark pick up.
There's a nice long set of troubleshooting steps in section 8D for the 2.5L 4 in the FSM - I'd grab a FSM off Ebay (can be had for around $15 to $25 right as I type this) and work through that.
As to why do they fail, well, overall it seems the cheap sensors are crap sensors ...
RwP
There's a nice long set of troubleshooting steps in section 8D for the 2.5L 4 in the FSM - I'd grab a FSM off Ebay (can be had for around $15 to $25 right as I type this) and work through that.
As to why do they fail, well, overall it seems the cheap sensors are crap sensors ...
RwP
#3
here is an update---I have fuel,spark. when I pour gas in it runs until gas is gone then wont start. I changed the fuel injector. so now it seems to be narrowed down to the POWER to the injector. that 2 wire connector. they call it the injector cap. that will only go on 1 direction. is there something else that i'm missing?
#6
Hoeky - Borrow a set of NOID lights and see if you're getting the signal at the injector.
Back track to the ECU.
On my 1988 V6, I lost one of the two injector drive signals off my ECU, so I had to replace it with another one. Not saying it's the ECU, now, but see if that's the problem.
Also, get a nice fuel pressure tester, let's see what kind of pressure you've got on that fuel rail. If it's not high enough, or if it's too high, the injector can't work. (Not enough == not enough fuel, too much == injector can't open against the pressure.)
Now - for the exact pressures, and the exact wiring you need, I highly Highly HIGHLY recommend the Factory Service Manual. Mine is a 1988, and may not be useful for your 1989. If all else fails, you can always check out AllDataDIY and purchase a one year subscription which will have the same info, just a bit harder to find sometimes.
RwP
Back track to the ECU.
On my 1988 V6, I lost one of the two injector drive signals off my ECU, so I had to replace it with another one. Not saying it's the ECU, now, but see if that's the problem.
Also, get a nice fuel pressure tester, let's see what kind of pressure you've got on that fuel rail. If it's not high enough, or if it's too high, the injector can't work. (Not enough == not enough fuel, too much == injector can't open against the pressure.)
Now - for the exact pressures, and the exact wiring you need, I highly Highly HIGHLY recommend the Factory Service Manual. Mine is a 1988, and may not be useful for your 1989. If all else fails, you can always check out AllDataDIY and purchase a one year subscription which will have the same info, just a bit harder to find sometimes.
RwP
#7