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Coil pack melting

Help, Advice, Owners' Discussion and DIY Tutorials on Volvo's stylish, distinctive P2 platform cars sold as model years 2001-2007 (North American market year designations).

2001 - 2007 V70
2001 - 2004 V70 XC (Cross Country)
2004 - 2007 XC70 (Cross Country)
2001 - 2009 S60
2003 - 2007 S60 R
2004 - 2007 V70 R

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StephenG
Posts: 17
Joined: 30 December 2020
Year and Model: 2004 c70
Location: Herts

Re: Coil pack melting

Post by StephenG »

Zero (hard down) on all the coils. Today found the crank sensor base totally destroyed and the sensor floating in a sea of silicone and held in place by nothing but luck and gravity. Managed to get it out without dropping anything into the flywheel and ordered new parts. I don’t know if it will solve the problem, as I said, would it just one coil to overheat, though I believe it affects the timing. Now I’ve got to wait a week for new parts so if you think of anything else I will check it out. Thanks for input,

StephenG
Posts: 17
Joined: 30 December 2020
Year and Model: 2004 c70
Location: Herts

Post by StephenG »

Back to it, changed the crank sensor, which needed changing, but it made no difference to the coil pack, still overheating within 2 minutes, so I can’t find anything else to test except the ecu. Unless someone knows another answer?

StephenG
Posts: 17
Joined: 30 December 2020
Year and Model: 2004 c70
Location: Herts

Post by StephenG »

Sorry Abscate, missed this question, no3 to ground is hard down which I believe it should be.

StephenG
Posts: 17
Joined: 30 December 2020
Year and Model: 2004 c70
Location: Herts

Post by StephenG »

Ok, back with latest update, my car is just back from the local Volvo dealer after 3 days of technical scrutiny and they haven’t found the answer. So to change tack slightly if you had a single coil pack wired up on a bench, what would you do to make melt in a short period of time?, allowing for the voltage etc being correct

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jonesg  
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Post by jonesg »

I'd put a coil on the bench and find out.

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RickHaleParker
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Post by RickHaleParker »

StephenG wrote: 28 Jan 2021, 07:22 Sorry Abscate, missed this question, no3 to ground is hard down which I believe it should be.
Measure the electrical resistance with an Ohm meter. A coating of oxide can cause high resistance. Current through a high resistance produces HEAT!

If the resistance in the pathway to ground on #3 is high. It will slow down the energy transfer rate. The energy in the collapsing magnetic field has got to be transferred or converted in a finite amount of time. Any energy that cannot be transferred in that amount of time is convert into HEAT!.
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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
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erikv11
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Post by erikv11 »

RickHaleParker wrote: 18 Feb 2021, 08:10
StephenG wrote: 28 Jan 2021, 07:22 Sorry Abscate, missed this question, no3 to ground is hard down which I believe it should be.
Measure the electrical resistance with an Ohm meter. A coating of oxide can cause high resistance. Current through a high resistance produces HEAT!

If the resistance in the pathway to ground on #3 is high. It will slow down the energy transfer rate. The energy in the collapsing magnetic field has got to be transferred or converted in a finite amount of time. Any energy that cannot be transferred in that amount of time is convert into HEAT!.
This!

The earlier comments about looking for a short are logical but in practice it is usually the opposite when you find a hot spot - a poor connection like an internally corroded cable etc.
'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

kaupz
Posts: 4
Joined: 19 July 2016
Year and Model: 2000 v70 I-gen
Location: Estonia

Post by kaupz »

How did it end?

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