Login Register

No Sparks... No Idea what to do... Topic is solved

Help, Advice and DIY Tutorials on Volvo's P80 platform cars -- Volvo's 1990s "bread and butter" cars -- powered by the ubiquitous and durable Volvo inline 5-cylinder engine.

1992 - 1997 850, including 850 R, 850 T-5R, 850 T-5, 850 GLT
1997 - 2000 S70, S70 AWD
1997 - 2000 V70, V70 AWD
1997 - 2000 V70-XC
1997 - 2004 C70

Post Reply
dj_v70
Posts: 240
Joined: 19 July 2014
Year and Model: v70 2003
Location: ri
Has thanked: 7 times
Been thanked: 23 times

Re: No Sparks... No Idea what to do...

Post by dj_v70 »

No spark testing coil by itself. You need a new coil.

One last test to make sure you did everything correctly. Make sure both positive and negative connections are removed from coil. Take a piece of wire and short the 2 coil terminals together for a second. This makes sure all voltage is drained from the coil. Put ohm meter across 2 terminals. If you get a high number (ie. 1kohm or greater), coil is fried and that is why there is no spark). If this test passes, coil can still be bad. Spark test is definitive, just was hoping for 2nd confirmation.

User avatar
erikv11
Posts: 11800
Joined: 25 July 2009
Year and Model: 850, V70, S60R, XC70
Location: Iowa
Has thanked: 292 times
Been thanked: 765 times

Post by erikv11 »

Are there any more Volvo coils at your junkyard? PM me if you need one.
'95 854 T-5R, Motronic 4.4, 185k
'98 V70, T5 tune-injectors-turbo, LPT engine, 304k, daily driver
'06 S60 R, 197k
'07 XC70, black, 205k
'07 XC70, willow green, 212k
'99 Camry V6 :shock: 153k
gone: '96 NA 850 210k, '98 NA V70 182k, '98 S70 NA 225k, '96 855 NA 169k

User avatar
shihabafi
Posts: 88
Joined: 8 July 2018
Year and Model: 1995 850 Wagon
Location: Atlanta, Georgia
Has thanked: 50 times
Been thanked: 8 times
Contact:

Post by shihabafi »

Okay so here's how everything went down today. This morning we took the coil and headed to the junkyard. We went there, exchanged it, and while we were there, I pulled off a Throttle Position Sensor, and also one of those grey relays (not even sure what they do... oh well). Then we came home, hooked them up, and cranked him up. We got some signs of life. It was struggling, and smoke started coming out of the camshaft position sensor...

Then my dad noticed that the one that was originally in the car, and the one that we swapped out with it, were slightly different. So we went back to the junkyard, and grabbed one that looked more like ours. (Oddly, it came out of a Turbo 850... And mines doesn't have a Turbo... science?) Anyways we brought that guy home and threw him in. Then she started properly.

So that's how I did it. I replaced the Ignition coil, the Throttle Position Sensor, and some relay. And then the camshaft sensor. Which one was bad? I don't know, and I don't plan on finding out. As long as it starts.

But there's still one more problem. It cranks for about 3-4 seconds before it starts up. After starting, it will rev at about 2k for a few seconds. After that, everything's back to normal. (better than the normal I'm used to, if I say so myself... :D)

What do I do now?

Dmck
Posts: 65
Joined: 29 June 2018
Year and Model: 1995 850
Location: Austin, TX
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 3 times

Post by Dmck »

Congrats on getting the car going.

The high rev could be a lot of things.. but I would guess it's your cars air fuel mix trying to find a balance.

That could be a vacuum leak
Idle air control valve
Thottle position sensor
Fuel leak creating an air pocket in the fuel line
Bad purge can/valve

Dmck
Posts: 65
Joined: 29 June 2018
Year and Model: 1995 850
Location: Austin, TX
Has thanked: 2 times
Been thanked: 3 times

Post by Dmck »

Also since now you have the car running do the pvc glove test. You can use a piece of plastic bag too.

Take off oil cap and stick glove on it sealed around the the lip where the oil cap rests and see if it inflates

User avatar
shihabafi
Posts: 88
Joined: 8 July 2018
Year and Model: 1995 850 Wagon
Location: Atlanta, Georgia
Has thanked: 50 times
Been thanked: 8 times
Contact:

Post by shihabafi »

Dmck wrote: 14 Jul 2018, 23:23 Also since now you have the car running do the pvc glove test. You can use a piece of plastic bag too.

Take off oil cap and stick glove on it sealed around the the lip where the oil cap rests and see if it inflates
It sucks it in, yayy!

User avatar
abscate
MVS Moderator
Posts: 35301
Joined: 17 February 2013
Year and Model: 99: V70s S70s,05 V70
Location: Port Jefferson Long Island NY
Has thanked: 1505 times
Been thanked: 3818 times

Post by abscate »

You revel in solving your first Big problem and saving yourself about $1000 in diagnostics Labour and parts that a tech would have thrown at the car. We are proud of you here,too. Dad is too, but’s might not let on as much as we do.

Stage zero is the process of getting an old car to its proper running state,so start a thread with your year model make and some pictures, and let’s get it done.

Fluid changes

Evaluate brakes

ATF drain and fills

Cooling group hoses

Vacuum hoses, IAC hoses...I really can’t say too much about these. Many, many hours/ dollars are wasted on old Volvo’s with 23 year old rubber hoses that have failed in dark corners of the engine causing running problems that Can avoided by replacing these proactively
Empty Nester
A Captain in a Sea of Estrogen
1999-V70-T5M56 2005-V70-M56 1999-S70 VW T4 XC90-in-Red
Link to Maintenance record thread

User avatar
shihabafi
Posts: 88
Joined: 8 July 2018
Year and Model: 1995 850 Wagon
Location: Atlanta, Georgia
Has thanked: 50 times
Been thanked: 8 times
Contact:

Post by shihabafi »

abscate wrote: 15 Jul 2018, 05:21 You revel in solving your first Big problem and saving yourself about $1000 in diagnostics Labour and parts that a tech would have thrown at the car. We are proud of you here,too. Dad is too, but’s might not let on as much as we do.
Oh yes... He definitely doesn't show it as much as I do :D

I've realized that working on cars is like playing a giant, real life version of Sudoku. Sometimes it gets very challenging, but that's part of the fun...

User avatar
abscate
MVS Moderator
Posts: 35301
Joined: 17 February 2013
Year and Model: 99: V70s S70s,05 V70
Location: Port Jefferson Long Island NY
Has thanked: 1505 times
Been thanked: 3818 times

Post by abscate »

The real masters on this board...we have maybe four or five of them on this Board .....will play Car Soduku in about 60:seconds. The mastery is learning the diagnostic path, not the symptom path.

“My car feels like it loses power at speed, so I changed my fuel filter since people told me it’s plugged”

Frustration, expense , and anger follow.

The masters don’t replace anything until the let the symptoms guide them To root cause, then test the part, then replace. The experience they have let’s the: rule things out much faster than you and me.

Stumbling at speed, check fuel pressure to spec, it’s ok. It could be a fuel injector delivery problem, except masters know that those almost never fail. If you ask them to check the ECU,they will weld your toolbox shut and then throw it into the lake.
Empty Nester
A Captain in a Sea of Estrogen
1999-V70-T5M56 2005-V70-M56 1999-S70 VW T4 XC90-in-Red
Link to Maintenance record thread

Sniperboy80123
Posts: 12
Joined: 22 August 2018
Year and Model: 1998 Volvo s70 t5m
Location: Los Angeles

Post by Sniperboy80123 »

So what was the problem after all

Post Reply
  • Similar Topics
    Replies
    Views
    Last post