Ignition System Troubleshooting Hub
One place to chase ignition problems from “cranks, no spark” to “this system has hit its limit.” Follow the steps, run the numbered Quick Tests (QT) for proof, then use the symptom QC pages when you need a longer walk-through.
Tools for this hub: $10 test light, basic multimeter, spark tester, short jumper lead.
Safety: Disable fuel when cranking for spark tests. Keep hands clear of rotating parts. Use insulated tools. Disconnect the battery when swapping ignition modules or wiring.
Jump To:
- Diagnostic Mode
- Quick Tests (QT) – Universal Ignition Tests
- Symptom QC Pages – By Problem
- Step-By-Step Flow
- Step 1 – Identify the Symptom
- Step 2 – Do I Have Spark?
- Step 3 – No Spark at the Coil
- Step 4 – Spark Present at Coil, Not at Plugs
- Step 5 – Intermittent / Under-Load Failures
- Step 6 – Wiring Fixes
- Step 7 – Upgrade Decision
- Step 8 – Safety
- Wrap-Up & Next Moves
Identify the Symptom
Be honest about what it is actually doing:
- Cranks, no start (possible no spark) – go to Step 2
- Cold no spark – go to Step 3
- Hot no start – go to Step 5
- Starts then stalls – go to Step 5
- Misfire under load / high RPM – go to Step 5
- Random misfire – go to Step 5
- Ignition cutout while driving – go to Step 5
This hub behaves like a flow chart. Follow your condition.
Do I Have Spark?
- Disable fuel and crank the engine.
- Test for spark at the coil output (not the plug first).
Run the numbered Quick Tests (QT): Universal Ignition System Quick Tests (QT)
Jump straight to QT 1 (Spark Gate): QT 1 – Spark Gate
Full symptom walk-through (QC page): QC – Cranks, No Start
Decision: No spark at coil -> Step 3. Spark at coil -> Step 4.
Deep Dive Explainers:
Primary vs Secondary Ignition Circuits |
Spark Energy vs Spark Voltage
No Spark at the Coil
Start here (QT links):
- QT 2 – Coil Power During Crank
- QT 3 – Trigger Proof (Module/ICM Switching)
- QT 4 – Pickup Proof (Distributor/Crank Signal)
Full symptom walk-throughs (QC pages):
QC – Cold No Spark |
QC – Intermittent No Spark |
QC – No Spark After Repair
Decision: power/ground not proven -> Step 6. power/ground proven -> trigger/module path.
Deep Dive Explainers:
Magnetic vs Hall-Effect Sensors |
Crank Trigger vs Distributor Trigger
Spark Present at Coil, Not at Plugs
Start here (QT link):
Full symptom walk-through (QC page): QC – Weak Spark
Decision: Spark delivery fixed -> system OK. Still failing under load/hot -> Step 5.
Deep Dive Explainers:
Suppression vs Solid-Core Plug Wires |
Resistor vs Non-Resistor Spark Plugs
Intermittent or Under-Load Failures
Start here (QT links):
- QT 6 – Ignition Switch Voltage Drop
- QT 7 – Base Timing Proof (Distributor Setup)
- QT 8 – Mechanical Sync (Timing Chain)
Full symptom walk-throughs (QC pages):
QC – Hot No Start |
QC – Starts Then Stalls |
QC – Misfire Under Load |
QC – High RPM Misfire |
QC – Random Misfire |
QC – Ignition Cutout While Driving
After-repair path (QC): QC – No Spark After Repair
Decision: voltage drop or bad grounds -> Step 6. repeat high RPM miss -> Step 7.
Deep Dive Explainers:
Coil Saturation and Heat Limits |
Ignition Energy Limits at High RPM |
Dwell Time (What It Is and Why It Matters)
Wiring Fixes (Power and Grounds)
- Voltage drop on ignition feed while cranking (run vs crank matters).
- Voltage drop on module/ECU ground (not just continuity).
- Grounds must be on clean bare metal, tight, and protected.
- Avoid shared grounds with high-current devices.
Wiring guide (QC page): Wiring 101 – Ignition Power and Ground
Back to QT power checks: QT 2 – Coil Power During Crank | QT 6 – Ignition Switch Voltage Drop
Deep Dive Explainers:
Ignition Switch and Run/Crank Voltage Drops |
Ignition System Voltage Sensitivity |
Grounding in Ignition Systems
Decide If the Ignition System Has Hit Its Limit
- High RPM misfire persists after wiring and delivery are proven good.
- Misfire increases with cylinder pressure (boost/nitrous/compression) despite correct plugs and gap.
- Repeat confirmed thermal failures (module/coil) with verified voltage supply.
- Dwell/saturation limits are proven (not guessed).
Deep Dive Explainers:
Cylinder Pressure vs Spark Requirement |
When an Ignition System Is “Out of Headroom”
Safety While Testing Ignition
- Use a real spark tester (no “hold the wire near ground” nonsense).
- Keep hands, clothing, and leads clear of rotating parts.
- Disable fuel for extended cranking and spark tests.
- Do not hot-swap ignition modules/coils with the key on.
Safety guide: Ignition System Safety
Symptom QC Pages Index
Numbered driveway proofs live here: Universal Ignition System Quick Tests (QT)
- QC – Cranks, No Start
- QC – Hot No Start
- QC – Cold No Spark
- QC – Starts Then Stalls
- QC – Intermittent No Spark
- QC – Misfire Under Load
- QC – High RPM Misfire
- QC – Random Misfire
- QC – Weak Spark
- QC – Ignition Cutout While Driving
- QC – No Spark After Repair
- Wiring 101 – Ignition Power and Ground
- Ignition System Safety
Next Moves
- Run the numbered QT page first: Universal Ignition System Quick Tests (QT)
- If you need more detail for your exact symptom, grab the matching QC page from the index above.
- If Step 7 triggers are proven, exit diagnostics and move to upgrade logic (system-level change, not random parts).
