Crank, no spark, no fuel

Timothy McManus

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I have an early 1993 RT/10, was running great until I went out to the car one day and it just cranks, but never fires over. I checked all of the fuses in the passenger footwell, they were all good. No smell of gas out of the exhaust after cranking. I put a spark tester inline with a few of the spark plugs and I’m not getting any spark while cranking. I can hear the fuel pump running for 2 seconds when I turn the key to run so I am assuming there is good fuel pressure. I have a fuel pressure gauge, but don’t see a shrader valve anywhere to measure it. When I check the engine codes I get:

12 Direct battery input to PCM was disconnected within the last 50 key-on cycles (normal)

33 A/C clutch relay circuit

55 End of error messages

Code 33 has always been there, but idk if it could have anything to do with this new issue.


My thoughts are a crankshaft position sensor, camshaft position sensor or ignition module or something else that I’m unaware of. Does anyone know a way to narrow down the problem?
 

Viper Specialty

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Crank engine. Listen for fuel pump run-on for a second after engine stops rotating. If you are getting FP activation, unlikely to be crank sensor issue, more likely Cam sensor. Otherwise, no FP activation when cranking often = bad crank position sensor.
 
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Timothy McManus

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I put my hand on the fuel pump relay and could feel it kick on and prime for 2 seconds when the key was turned to Run. Cranked the engine over for about 5 seconds and felt the fuel pump relay turn on for maybe ½ a second. Cranked the engine a second time and did not feel the fuel pump relay turn on at all. I have a new crankshaft position sensor on the way and will update once I get it switched out.

Thanks Viper Specialty for the helpful insight
 
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Timothy McManus

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The tachometer didn’t move at all while cranking, but I did get some oil pressure after a few seconds.
 
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Timothy McManus

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Just replaced the crankshaft position sensor, still no spark, no fuel, and no rpm showing on the tach. Any other ideas that I can try?
 
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Timothy McManus

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I checked all the fuses, and checked power and ground to the ignition module and ECU. Everything looked good there Are there any hidden fusible links that might be blown?
 

Viper Specialty

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If you are 100% sure you are getting power/ground at PCM and IGN, have a good crank position sensor, good crank position sensor wiring, fuel pump activation at key-on... the last hail-mary is a Cam Position sensor [unless you are capable of probing the sensor output with a DVOM and manually rotating the engine waiting for the sensor output to change in order to verify functionality].

Beyond that, your PCM becomes suspect in a hurry, it may be dropping out right after activation due to internal shorting. We are the supplier for those, but you need to check sensor inputs first.

Unfortunately your hands are largely tied without access to a DRB-3.

WARNING: If your PCM is dropping out shortly after key-on, you are absolutely riding the edge of a full-on PCM meltdown. I strongly suggest leaving the PCM disconnected when you are not actively working on the car until the problem can be verified. PCM meltdown can occur even without the key in position, as they are powered all the time. Cost difference to replace a PCM without a core vs with is huge. Dont risk damage pointlessly while figuring this out.
 

Steve-Indy

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Good point, Dan.

The Schrader valve port for reading fuel pressure on an early Gen I is at the very rear of the driver side intake manifold... noting that it faces the driver. You might need to remove the windshield cowling to get to the port. It might be helpful to put the gauge on it before and during cranking engine to be sure that you understand just what the fuel pump is doing.
 
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