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A new twist to a No Spark - 5V reference problem.

12K views 38 replies 6 participants last post by  95-97-98zj  
I don't know OBD2 or 4.0, so this is general. The 5v is supplied by an internal power supply inside the PCM. That power supply is regulated and likely uses a floating ground. The internal power supply is completely dependent on the 12vdc system voltage to properly regulate at 5v. I'm wondering what the system voltage is during cranking? The 10v spike *might* be ok is my thought.
 
I could stand about 5 minutes of that guy to the point where he was checking the sensor ground. I'm sure if I had the same problem, I'd hear him out.

I'll let you get back to jtec, he'll help you through this.

The sensor ground is a floating ground. True ground is always zero volts relative to the power source. So make sure all the components in the equation have a true ground where needed because floating grounds are dependent upon it. Not trying to waste your time, I'm pretty curious as to what it could be and hope you get her running soon.
 
None of the 2 things logically should have fixed it, but hey.
I can't think of any noises the PCM could make, unless they are bad ones.
Maybe leaving power to the PCM overnight tweaked the caps. Or fidgeting with the ground changed something. Total guesses. I like your next move and plan. PO black tape seems suspect.