Yellow Rose
Suspended
- Joined
- 22 November 2001
- Messages
- 2,256
Sometimes my NSX fires immediately upon turning the ignition key.....I bet the crankshaft barely makes a full revolution when the engine fires.
Sometimes the engine cranks for about two seconds (I dunno, maybe a dozen or so revolutions) before firing.
Every once it a while it won’t start after cranking for a couple of seconds. I turn the key off then try again and the engine starts. A couple of times I did not turn the key off and kept cranking but the engine did not fire, as it was flooded. (I never pump the gas pedal when starting - I thought fuel injected engines could not be flooded.) Try again but no luck. Try back in thirty minutes and it starts.
Search suggests possibly the ignition switch, fuel pump, fuel filter, fuel injectors or main relay.
Ignition switch - I’m not sure I buy this. In my case, the ignition switch is properly commanding the starter to crank. And if it is giving juice to the starter power, then it is also flowing current to the igniter and coil packs, right?
Fuel pump - rock solid 54 PSI.
Fuel filter - only 22k miles old.
Fuel injectors - only 22k miles old.
Main relay - as with the ignition switch I don’t consider this to be a factor. Doesn’t the main relay give juice to the fuel pump? If my fuel pump is at 54 PSI, then the main relay can’t be bad.....unless there is another internal circuit that goes to the coil packs.
This above starting descriptions are random and not predictable, independent of engine temperature or ambient air temperature.....cold-cold, cold-hot, hot-hot, hot-cold.....it makes no difference.
Sometimes the engine cranks for about two seconds (I dunno, maybe a dozen or so revolutions) before firing.
Every once it a while it won’t start after cranking for a couple of seconds. I turn the key off then try again and the engine starts. A couple of times I did not turn the key off and kept cranking but the engine did not fire, as it was flooded. (I never pump the gas pedal when starting - I thought fuel injected engines could not be flooded.) Try again but no luck. Try back in thirty minutes and it starts.
Search suggests possibly the ignition switch, fuel pump, fuel filter, fuel injectors or main relay.
Ignition switch - I’m not sure I buy this. In my case, the ignition switch is properly commanding the starter to crank. And if it is giving juice to the starter power, then it is also flowing current to the igniter and coil packs, right?
Fuel pump - rock solid 54 PSI.
Fuel filter - only 22k miles old.
Fuel injectors - only 22k miles old.
Main relay - as with the ignition switch I don’t consider this to be a factor. Doesn’t the main relay give juice to the fuel pump? If my fuel pump is at 54 PSI, then the main relay can’t be bad.....unless there is another internal circuit that goes to the coil packs.
This above starting descriptions are random and not predictable, independent of engine temperature or ambient air temperature.....cold-cold, cold-hot, hot-hot, hot-cold.....it makes no difference.