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1999 S70 GLT Ignition Coils

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

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ericmci
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1999 S70 GLT Ignition Coils

Post by ericmci »

Hi

I am doing a tune up on my S70 GLT - filters- plugs -etc
And I am wondering if i should replace my ignition coils while I am at it.
About 4 years ago one coil went bad and was replaced but I believe the rest are original at 164k.
The car idles perfectly and no codes are thrown but might it just be a good idea or do you subscribe to the theory of only replacing when they go bad?

Thanks for the wisdom!

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abscate
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Post by abscate »

It depends on your tolerance to failure.

I have six cars with coil in plug ignition , two if them get the proactive 120k coil replacement.

Four of them get coils replaced on failure. I keep a cheap code reader in these cars.

I did have a coil fail at 100k on one of these and had to do a roadside recently.

viewtopic.php?f=1&t=91347&hilit=1999+coil+failure
Empty Nester
A Captain in a Sea of Estrogen
1999-V70-T5M56 2005-V70-M56 1999-S70 VW T4 XC90-in-Red
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scot850
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Post by scot850 »

I would leave alone if they work fine. If you want piece of mind you could do the following checks on the coils:

1) Remove the rubber boots and check them carefully for any splits which can lead to shorting.
2) Look around the coil casing at the top of the 'stalk' part. Look for cracks in the coil material. I still have to try to find a material I can fill the cracks with that can stand the temperature and environment. I have several coils that were working fine but replaced with new and kept the old for back-ups/emergency.
3) When re-fitting make sure the face of the coil around the bolt hole is clean as well as that on the head it bolts to as this is the ground.

Finally. I bought what was sold to me as Volvo OE coils from a now defunct parts supplier. 2/5 were bad. One arrived damaged and another was DOA.

Neil.
2006 V70 2.5T AWD Polestar tune
2000 V70 R - still being an endless PITA
2006 XC70 - Our son now has this and still parked in our garage
2003 Toyota 4Runner V8 Limited
2015 Kia Sportage EX-L - Sold
1993 850 GLT -Sold
1998 V70 XC - Sold
1997 Volvo 850 SE NA - Went to niece in California - Sold
2000 V70 SE NA - Sold

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erikv11
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Post by erikv11 »

abscate wrote: 07 Sep 2020, 18:40 It depends on your tolerance to failure.

I have six cars with coil in plug ignition , two if them get the proactive 120k coil replacement.

Four of them get coils replaced on failure. I keep a cheap code reader in these cars.

I did have a coil fail at 100k on one of these and had to do a roadside recently.

viewtopic.php?f=1&t=91347&hilit=1999+coil+failure
My S60 came to me with fairly new cheap, no-name coils. PO thought they were doing a "tune-up" before sale sigh. What interval might you give those? I suppose I could wait until one fails then replace them all.
'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

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abscate
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Post by abscate »

I think that’s what I would do for the Run to fail model

It might be easier to sell a set of working five no name coils , though
Empty Nester
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1999-V70-T5M56 2005-V70-M56 1999-S70 VW T4 XC90-in-Red
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cn90
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Post by cn90 »

This is what I do for my cars...

- Get 1-2 used Volvo coils from junk yard or ebay for $10/each. Mark them with Sharpie so you know which is which.

- Install these parts and run for a week to be sure they work. If any issues, return them.

- Or you can buy new from Volvo or FCPEuro.

- Reinstall the original coils. Keep the 1-2 used (or new) coils in the trunk as spare. The tool kit that came with car has 10-mm wrench, but a basic metric socket set is better.

- Get the $15 OBD Maxi Autel reader, and keep it in the trunk.
2004 V70 2.5T 100K+
2005 XC90 2.5T 110K+

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abscate
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Post by abscate »

Then there is M-RTF...Modified Run to Fail

Run until one coil goes. Replace with new.
Now replace the other four with new, and use the four used for pure RTF cars.
Empty Nester
A Captain in a Sea of Estrogen
1999-V70-T5M56 2005-V70-M56 1999-S70 VW T4 XC90-in-Red
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erikv11
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Post by erikv11 »

The R coils are not $10 and/or usually improperly labeled on eBay and hard to find in junkyards. I know I could get a spare as a backup but I'm not really stressed about one failing, just contemplating if/when to replace them. They are sitting at 40k now.

So to be specific: for proactive replacement, what mileage interval might you give to no-name coils?

Realistically the ones I have are only desirable to R owners as RTF backups/replacements, perhaps I could sell off four of them as such and keep 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

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abscate
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Post by abscate »

I didn't know P2 R have different coils than P2, so I think I would run them
Empty Nester
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RickHaleParker
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Post by RickHaleParker »

ericmci wrote: 07 Sep 2020, 17:51 I am wondering if i should replace my ignition coils while I am at it.
Replace when needed. As you already know a bad coil will not leave you stranded.
⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙⸙
1998 C70, B5234T3, 16T, AW50-42, Bosch Motronic 4.4, Special Edition package.
2003 S40, B4204T3, 14T twin scroll AW55-50/51SN, Siemens EMS 2000.
2004 S60R, B8444S TF80 AWD. Yamaha V8 conversion
2005 XC90 T6 Executive, B6294T, 4T65 AWD, Bosch Motronic 7.0.

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