1995 accord

Discussion in 'Accord' started by pjracer, Apr 28, 2008.

  1. pjracer

    pjracer Guest

    car dies when driving it down the road. sometimes it will go a week
    without doing it then like this week it did three times and now it
    wont start. have heard to change igniter, coil, distributer. just want
    it up and running. your suggestions will be appreciated.
     
    pjracer, Apr 28, 2008
    #1
  2. pjracer

    motsco_ Guest

    =============================

    Depends a bit on mileage and what country you're in.

    Have you checked whether your car was part of the big ignition switch
    recall? You can also set up an account with American Honda's Ownerlink
    site, here:
    https://www.ahm-ownerlink.com/login.asp?page=%2Fprod%5Fhome%2Easp You'll
    also be able to view any Recalls or TSB's specifically for your vehicle.


    'Curly
     
    motsco_, Apr 28, 2008
    #2
  3.  
    Backwoodz Tuner, Apr 28, 2008
    #3
  4. pjracer

    Elle Guest

    Could be several things, but as others say, the coils,
    igniters and ignition switch are notorious for dying as you
    describe. If the dying occurs after warmup, then my money is
    on the igniter being failed. Only buy an OEM coil.
    Aftermarket ones do not last one. Consider changing the
    igniter at the same time, since an aged coil can have
    detrimental effects on the igniter.

    The ignitor and coil are integral (literally) to the
    distributor, being built right on its housing. It's
    inaccurate to say "the distributor is failing." Not to be
    persnickety but more to promote good communications so as to
    get your car running a.s.a.p.

    Tegger's famous page
    http://www.tegger.com/hondafaq/faq.html#startrun should help
    narrow this down a lot.
     
    Elle, Apr 28, 2008
    #4
  5. pjracer

    Elle Guest

    Post-o The coil is very likely to be the culprit if the car
    was dying only after warmup.
     
    Elle, Apr 28, 2008
    #5
  6. Elle4/28/08 11:54uqmRj.105448$
    Before I replaced any expensive parts I would replace the rotor especially
    if it is an aftermarket rotor. Rotors that are poorly made can develop a
    "tunnel" through the plastic and allow the coil spark to short directly to
    the distributor shaft. The reason it happens when warm and not cold is
    because the tunnel gets bigger when warm. This tip was straight from Honda's
    Tech Line in the 1980's when I worked in a shop. The customer had spent well
    over a $1000 throwing parts at it at a non-dealer shop. When he finally
    brought it to us we fixed it with Tech Lines help for $14. The symptoms
    exhibited were the same if I am reading the OP description correctly.

    The problem rotor was a Honda rotor which came from a batch made with a
    defective molding process. I suspect that Honda rotors will not have this
    problem again but aftermarket rotors probably will.
    --
    Pickleman

    Please remove "yourpants" to reply
    1998 Civic HX MT with 142K
    2000 CRV EX MT with 98K
     
    delbert brecht, Apr 28, 2008
    #6
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