Car gets hot dies and won’t restart
- cheaptrick
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Wed Oct 05, 2016 6:47 pm
- Your car is a: 1980 Spider 2000
- Location: Maui Hawaii
Car gets hot dies and won’t restart
1980 FI spider, Tried a lot of things; new distributor, new coil, new plugs and plug wires, new ignition control module. Have fuel runs like a champ then hits 190 fan did not come on and car died. Won’t restart till it cools off after a few hours. Help I’m at a loss! Thanks Steve
Steve
- cheaptrick
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Wed Oct 05, 2016 6:47 pm
- Your car is a: 1980 Spider 2000
- Location: Maui Hawaii
Re: Car gets hot dies and won’t restart
Also somehow looses spark after it gets hot and runs a while. dies at 290 temp then if I test spark these is none. Can the heat sink around coil go bad? Hope not it’s 400.00 part!
Steve
- cheaptrick
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Wed Oct 05, 2016 6:47 pm
- Your car is a: 1980 Spider 2000
- Location: Maui Hawaii
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- Posts: 3798
- Joined: Fri Mar 15, 2019 11:23 pm
- Your car is a: 1969 and 1971 124 spiders
- Location: San Francisco Bay Area
Re: Car gets hot dies and won’t restart
190 oF is normal operating temperature (half way on the gauge). But, a question to make sure I understand: The engine is working just fine, and then when it gets hot, it just dies? My first guess would be a bad (or weak) ignition control module or coil, but you replaced those. You might try another ICM, perhaps a different brand.
The heat sink doesn't "fail" when hot, but there is supposed to be some special heat conductive grease between the heat sink and the ICM. Did you use that?
Other possibilities are that the coolant temperature sensor (the one on the outlet near the front of the engine) is bad, but that doesn't cause the engine to just die all of sudden. Another possibility is the gap on the distributor pickup coil increases when hot, and the pickup coil isn't triggering. One other remote possibility is that the spark plug gap is too large, but I would think it would falter first before cutting out completely.
If you can, I'd put a timing light on the main wire from the coil to the distributor when the engine dies. Just crank it and see if the timing light flashes. If it flashes OK, then the problem is probably not the ignition.
-Bryan
The heat sink doesn't "fail" when hot, but there is supposed to be some special heat conductive grease between the heat sink and the ICM. Did you use that?
Other possibilities are that the coolant temperature sensor (the one on the outlet near the front of the engine) is bad, but that doesn't cause the engine to just die all of sudden. Another possibility is the gap on the distributor pickup coil increases when hot, and the pickup coil isn't triggering. One other remote possibility is that the spark plug gap is too large, but I would think it would falter first before cutting out completely.
If you can, I'd put a timing light on the main wire from the coil to the distributor when the engine dies. Just crank it and see if the timing light flashes. If it flashes OK, then the problem is probably not the ignition.
-Bryan
- cheaptrick
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Wed Oct 05, 2016 6:47 pm
- Your car is a: 1980 Spider 2000
- Location: Maui Hawaii
Re: Car gets hot dies and won’t restart
Thanks Brian I’m willing to try anything at this point, didn’t use the special heat grease between ICM and coil sink. Try that next, got the ICM from Vicks, but will try great first before I change companies. Steve
Steve
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- Posts: 3798
- Joined: Fri Mar 15, 2019 11:23 pm
- Your car is a: 1969 and 1971 124 spiders
- Location: San Francisco Bay Area
Re: Car gets hot dies and won’t restart
Steve (AKA Frank Zappa), yes, try the heat sink grease. However, your ICM may already be fried, so I'd try another. I believe there is a GM module that is pretty much the exact replacement and more reliable. Search the forum for which one.
-Bryan
-Bryan
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- Patron 2022
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- Joined: Sat Jan 30, 2010 7:58 pm
- Your car is a: 1979 spider 2000
- Location: Charlotte, NC
Re: Car gets hot dies and won’t restart
I had a similar problem. One of the radiator hoses had a very small hole. It didn't open up unless the car was going slow and the temp went up. Then it started spraying a small stream on the coil. After cooling down, it started because the water evaporated.
1979 Fiat Spider (since new)
2005 Lincoln LS (the wife's car)
2003 Chevrolet Cavalier (daily driver)
1999 Honda Shadow VLX 600
1972 Grumman Traveller 5895L (long gone).
2005 Lincoln LS (the wife's car)
2003 Chevrolet Cavalier (daily driver)
1999 Honda Shadow VLX 600
1972 Grumman Traveller 5895L (long gone).
- cheaptrick
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Wed Oct 05, 2016 6:47 pm
- Your car is a: 1980 Spider 2000
- Location: Maui Hawaii
Re: Car gets hot dies and won’t restart
I have new coil, new ICM, and a new temp sensor on order. I also bought a universal fit ignition condenser. Not sure I even need the condenser, isn’t that for carberated cars? My fuel injected has a very old one running into coil, not even sure what is for and do I need it? Steve
Steve
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- Posts: 3798
- Joined: Fri Mar 15, 2019 11:23 pm
- Your car is a: 1969 and 1971 124 spiders
- Location: San Francisco Bay Area
Re: Car gets hot dies and won’t restart
The condenser is to lengthen the lifetime of the points, but you don't have those since you have electronic ignition. It was also there to suppress radio interference (static) in the AM band, but again, not needed for electronic ignition.cheaptrick wrote:Not sure I even need the condenser, isn’t that for carberated cars? My fuel injected has a very old one running into coil, not even sure what is for and do I need it? Steve
Unless.... You are using points to trigger the electronic ignition? Sort of a quasi-electronic ignition? Then you would need a condenser, although that would be a weird setup.
-Bryan
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- Posts: 13
- Joined: Sun Sep 25, 2022 1:28 am
- Your car is a: 1984 Pininfarina Spider
Re: Car gets hot dies and won’t restart
Hello Steve,
Did you manage to resolve your issue?
Would love to hear an update... thanks.
Did you manage to resolve your issue?
Would love to hear an update... thanks.