2013 accord cranks buy will not start
Hey all
Hopefully someone can help me. My 2013 accord starting idling rough in drive. Just getting worse and worse. So i cleaned the throttle body and took the negative battery terminal off. Put it all back together and now it will not start at all. It had a crankshaft error code so I replaced that but did not fix it. I checked spark and all coils and plugs are sparking. I also tried unhooking the maf sensor and that did not help. Before it cut off the car was rattling. Not sure if something was going bad or it was idling that bad. Not sure what else to try.
Hopefully someone can help me. My 2013 accord starting idling rough in drive. Just getting worse and worse. So i cleaned the throttle body and took the negative battery terminal off. Put it all back together and now it will not start at all. It had a crankshaft error code so I replaced that but did not fix it. I checked spark and all coils and plugs are sparking. I also tried unhooking the maf sensor and that did not help. Before it cut off the car was rattling. Not sure if something was going bad or it was idling that bad. Not sure what else to try.
Last edited by Danabryant1979; Dec 10, 2022 at 07:52 PM.
A P0339 code can be set by a bad sensor, wiring/connector issues, or PCM.
An ohm test is a quick first test, but it is not definitive. Ohm tests are only valid if the resistance is outside of the specifications. A reading in range does not mean the sensor wiring is working properly under electrical load.
Testing in the shop manual has a bunch of tests on the Honda scanner that most DIYers do not have. The sensor has 3 wires. Unplug the connector and inspect the connector for corrosion/loose connections. With your volt meter and the key in the II position with the engine not running, one wire should have 12V, one will be the signal wire, and the 3rd wire will be ground (probably black wire). See if you have 12V on one of the wires to a good ground (touch the black meter lead to the - battery terminal). The black wire should have almost zero resistance to ground. The third wire is the signal wire to the PCM.
The other item in the manual that can cause a strange signal is the ckp pulse plate behind the timing chain cover. It is possible this is damaged and generating a poor signal on a good sensor.
I don't trust aftermarket sensors as they can be bad out of the box. I use new OEM parts if they aren't prohibitively expensive. I'll get used OEM sensors at a u-pull-it yard or on ebay vs new aftermarket.
An ohm test is a quick first test, but it is not definitive. Ohm tests are only valid if the resistance is outside of the specifications. A reading in range does not mean the sensor wiring is working properly under electrical load.
Testing in the shop manual has a bunch of tests on the Honda scanner that most DIYers do not have. The sensor has 3 wires. Unplug the connector and inspect the connector for corrosion/loose connections. With your volt meter and the key in the II position with the engine not running, one wire should have 12V, one will be the signal wire, and the 3rd wire will be ground (probably black wire). See if you have 12V on one of the wires to a good ground (touch the black meter lead to the - battery terminal). The black wire should have almost zero resistance to ground. The third wire is the signal wire to the PCM.
The other item in the manual that can cause a strange signal is the ckp pulse plate behind the timing chain cover. It is possible this is damaged and generating a poor signal on a good sensor.
I don't trust aftermarket sensors as they can be bad out of the box. I use new OEM parts if they aren't prohibitively expensive. I'll get used OEM sensors at a u-pull-it yard or on ebay vs new aftermarket.
A P0339 code can be set by a bad sensor, wiring/connector issues, or PCM.
An ohm test is a quick first test, but it is not definitive. Ohm tests are only valid if the resistance is outside of the specifications. A reading in range does not mean the sensor wiring is working properly under electrical load.
Testing in the shop manual has a bunch of tests on the Honda scanner that most DIYers do not have. The sensor has 3 wires. Unplug the connector and inspect the connector for corrosion/loose connections. With your volt meter and the key in the II position with the engine not running, one wire should have 12V, one will be the signal wire, and the 3rd wire will be ground (probably black wire). See if you have 12V on one of the wires to a good ground (touch the black meter lead to the - battery terminal). The black wire should have almost zero resistance to ground. The third wire is the signal wire to the PCM.
The other item in the manual that can cause a strange signal is the ckp pulse plate behind the timing chain cover. It is possible this is damaged and generating a poor signal on a good sensor.
I don't trust aftermarket sensors as they can be bad out of the box. I use new OEM parts if they aren't prohibitively expensive. I'll get used OEM sensors at a u-pull-it yard or on ebay vs new aftermarket.
An ohm test is a quick first test, but it is not definitive. Ohm tests are only valid if the resistance is outside of the specifications. A reading in range does not mean the sensor wiring is working properly under electrical load.
Testing in the shop manual has a bunch of tests on the Honda scanner that most DIYers do not have. The sensor has 3 wires. Unplug the connector and inspect the connector for corrosion/loose connections. With your volt meter and the key in the II position with the engine not running, one wire should have 12V, one will be the signal wire, and the 3rd wire will be ground (probably black wire). See if you have 12V on one of the wires to a good ground (touch the black meter lead to the - battery terminal). The black wire should have almost zero resistance to ground. The third wire is the signal wire to the PCM.
The other item in the manual that can cause a strange signal is the ckp pulse plate behind the timing chain cover. It is possible this is damaged and generating a poor signal on a good sensor.
I don't trust aftermarket sensors as they can be bad out of the box. I use new OEM parts if they aren't prohibitively expensive. I'll get used OEM sensors at a u-pull-it yard or on ebay vs new aftermarket.
Tried the old sensor and it still gives the same codes, for MAP, MAF, Crank and TPS , still in limp mode not revving above 3k. All the ones i unplugged. I just don't understand it lol


