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#1
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#2
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I have a 96 Jetta GL III 2.0 ABA engine auto trans. Drove 1 block from home yesterday and it just died. Pushed it home and it sits in the driveway. Do not have any spark. Changed coil, dist cap, rotor and plug wires with known good ones. Put the code reader on and had P341 -camshaft sensor code set. Cleared the code and cranked the engine a few times to see if code would reset. It didn't. I pulled the timing belt cover back enough to see that the belt was not broken but does have a lot of small cracks and should be replaced. I would like to find the root cause of the problem. My question is if the belt jumped enough teeth to kill the engine, could the P0341 code have been set because of it? I did not see the "check engine" light before it died. Will a camshaft sensor problem cause a no spark condition? I didn't yet perform all of the tests outlined by Bentley but i do have battery voltage at the coil. Thanks for any help. Rich |
#3
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I vote timing belt! If some teeth broke then the timing would change which could throw the camshaft sensor code and your engine will possibly die and not restart. The camshaft sensor on your 2.0 engine is the hall sensor inside of the distributor and should not stop your engine from running. If the distributor shifts a little out of time, due to a tooth change, then the ECM will notice that and throw a code. That makes sense to me! You need to check the timing belt alignment first. |
#4
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I won't be able to work on it for a couple of days but when I do I'll let the group know what I find. Thanks for the imput Dave. I'm still curious why I don't have spark. Maybe the crankshaft sensor shut it down if the timing jumped? Rich On Sat, 28 Apr 2007 13:15:11 GMT, "dave AKA vwdoc1" vwdoc1 (AT) hotmail (DOT) com> wrote: I vote timing belt! If some teeth broke then the timing would change which could throw the camshaft sensor code and your engine will possibly die and not restart. The camshaft sensor on your 2.0 engine is the hall sensor inside of the distributor and should not stop your engine from running. If the distributor shifts a little out of time, due to a tooth change, then the ECM will notice that and throw a code. That makes sense to me! You need to check the timing belt alignment first. |
#5
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The spark is basically "triggered" by the crank position sensor (engine speed sensor) and if it goes bad you probably will get no spark. If the ign. coil goes bad you probably will get no spark. If the ign switch goes bad you could possibly get no spark. I have not checked the spark after a 2.0l engine breaks its belt. :-( If the timing belt breaks then the engine usually has a different sound while you crank it over. Where/how did you test the spark? |
#6
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The problem was the timing belt. I've been working on cars for about 40 years so I'm ashamed to admit that when I first had the dist cap off I didn't turn the engine to see if the rotor was moving. The belt wasn't broken but all of the ribs around the crank pully were gone so the cam or dist gears wern't moving hence no spark . Put the new belt and tensioner on and it fired right up. Running smooth so hopefully no bent valves. Once again thanks for the advice. On Tue, 01 May 2007 11:48:01 GMT, "dave AKA vwdoc1" vwdoc1 (AT) hotmail (DOT) com> wrote: The spark is basically "triggered" by the crank position sensor (engine speed sensor) and if it goes bad you probably will get no spark. If the ign. coil goes bad you probably will get no spark. If the ign switch goes bad you could possibly get no spark. I have not checked the spark after a 2.0l engine breaks its belt. :-( If the timing belt breaks then the engine usually has a different sound while you crank it over. Where/how did you test the spark? |
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