Fuel pump relay
#1
Guest
Posts: n/a
Fuel pump relay
I finally tracked down my intermittent no start condition on my 92 prelude
Si. If it is a hot day (90+), the car needs to sit until cool or it won't
start. For some reason it wouldn't start today when I tried to start it
this afternoon after it sat all day in the afternoon sun. I put my fuel
pressure gauge on it and it read zero. I tried tapping on the relay I
thought controlled the fuel pump but it didn't help. I decided to take the
car apart tomorrow and let the car sit and cool off this evening. Sure
enough, the car started fine tonight. Would temperature effect the relay
like this or the pump? Or the ground taps? Pressure, when I have it, is
right on the manual's specifications.
Si. If it is a hot day (90+), the car needs to sit until cool or it won't
start. For some reason it wouldn't start today when I tried to start it
this afternoon after it sat all day in the afternoon sun. I put my fuel
pressure gauge on it and it read zero. I tried tapping on the relay I
thought controlled the fuel pump but it didn't help. I decided to take the
car apart tomorrow and let the car sit and cool off this evening. Sure
enough, the car started fine tonight. Would temperature effect the relay
like this or the pump? Or the ground taps? Pressure, when I have it, is
right on the manual's specifications.
#2
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Fuel pump relay
Van wrote:
> I finally tracked down my intermittent no start condition on my 92 prelude
> Si. If it is a hot day (90+), the car needs to sit until cool or it won't
> start. For some reason it wouldn't start today when I tried to start it
> this afternoon after it sat all day in the afternoon sun. I put my fuel
> pressure gauge on it and it read zero. I tried tapping on the relay I
> thought controlled the fuel pump but it didn't help. I decided to take the
> car apart tomorrow and let the car sit and cool off this evening. Sure
> enough, the car started fine tonight. Would temperature effect the relay
> like this or the pump? Or the ground taps? Pressure, when I have it, is
> right on the manual's specifications.
>
>
tegger.com. main relay.
> I finally tracked down my intermittent no start condition on my 92 prelude
> Si. If it is a hot day (90+), the car needs to sit until cool or it won't
> start. For some reason it wouldn't start today when I tried to start it
> this afternoon after it sat all day in the afternoon sun. I put my fuel
> pressure gauge on it and it read zero. I tried tapping on the relay I
> thought controlled the fuel pump but it didn't help. I decided to take the
> car apart tomorrow and let the car sit and cool off this evening. Sure
> enough, the car started fine tonight. Would temperature effect the relay
> like this or the pump? Or the ground taps? Pressure, when I have it, is
> right on the manual's specifications.
>
>
tegger.com. main relay.
#3
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Fuel pump relay
"Van" <not@this.time> wrote in message
news:S_LXe.1529$q1.1026@newsread3.news.atl.earthli nk.net...
>I finally tracked down my intermittent no start condition on my 92 prelude
> Si. If it is a hot day (90+), the car needs to sit until cool or it won't
> start. For some reason it wouldn't start today when I tried to start it
> this afternoon after it sat all day in the afternoon sun. I put my fuel
> pressure gauge on it and it read zero. I tried tapping on the relay I
> thought controlled the fuel pump but it didn't help. I decided to take
> the
> car apart tomorrow and let the car sit and cool off this evening. Sure
> enough, the car started fine tonight. Would temperature effect the relay
> like this or the pump? Or the ground taps? Pressure, when I have it, is
> right on the manual's specifications.
>
>
As jim beam says, classic main relay symptoms (including the trouble when
hot). The cracked solder connections inside the relay assembly just seem
more troublesome when hot.
Look at the pictures TeGGeR has and verify you are looking at the right
relay. Dunno for sure about the Prelude, but if it was easy to find I bet it
is the wrong one.
http://tegger.com/hondafaq/startproblems.html#mainrelay
http://tegger.com/hondafaq/mainrelay.html
Mike
news:S_LXe.1529$q1.1026@newsread3.news.atl.earthli nk.net...
>I finally tracked down my intermittent no start condition on my 92 prelude
> Si. If it is a hot day (90+), the car needs to sit until cool or it won't
> start. For some reason it wouldn't start today when I tried to start it
> this afternoon after it sat all day in the afternoon sun. I put my fuel
> pressure gauge on it and it read zero. I tried tapping on the relay I
> thought controlled the fuel pump but it didn't help. I decided to take
> the
> car apart tomorrow and let the car sit and cool off this evening. Sure
> enough, the car started fine tonight. Would temperature effect the relay
> like this or the pump? Or the ground taps? Pressure, when I have it, is
> right on the manual's specifications.
>
>
As jim beam says, classic main relay symptoms (including the trouble when
hot). The cracked solder connections inside the relay assembly just seem
more troublesome when hot.
Look at the pictures TeGGeR has and verify you are looking at the right
relay. Dunno for sure about the Prelude, but if it was easy to find I bet it
is the wrong one.
http://tegger.com/hondafaq/startproblems.html#mainrelay
http://tegger.com/hondafaq/mainrelay.html
Mike
#4
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Fuel pump relay
Thanks guys. Those sites make sense. I am ordering a main relay now.
Actually, I plan on doing the pump and cleaning grounds, later on, as
preventive maintenance for a 192k mile car.
"Michael Pardee" <michaeltnull@cybertrails.com> wrote in message
news:Pc2dnTx9qO_bnq3eRVn-1g@sedona.net...
> As jim beam says, classic main relay symptoms (including the trouble when
> hot). The cracked solder connections inside the relay assembly just seem
> more troublesome when hot.
>
> Look at the pictures TeGGeR has and verify you are looking at the right
> relay. Dunno for sure about the Prelude, but if it was easy to find I bet
it
> is the wrong one.
> http://tegger.com/hondafaq/startproblems.html#mainrelay
> http://tegger.com/hondafaq/mainrelay.html
>
> Mike
>
>
Actually, I plan on doing the pump and cleaning grounds, later on, as
preventive maintenance for a 192k mile car.
"Michael Pardee" <michaeltnull@cybertrails.com> wrote in message
news:Pc2dnTx9qO_bnq3eRVn-1g@sedona.net...
> As jim beam says, classic main relay symptoms (including the trouble when
> hot). The cracked solder connections inside the relay assembly just seem
> more troublesome when hot.
>
> Look at the pictures TeGGeR has and verify you are looking at the right
> relay. Dunno for sure about the Prelude, but if it was easy to find I bet
it
> is the wrong one.
> http://tegger.com/hondafaq/startproblems.html#mainrelay
> http://tegger.com/hondafaq/mainrelay.html
>
> Mike
>
>
#5
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Fuel pump relay
Van wrote:
>
> Thanks guys. Those sites make sense. I am ordering a main relay now.
> Actually, I plan on doing the pump and cleaning grounds, later on, as
> preventive maintenance for a 192k mile car.
>
========================
Forget the pump, unless your goal is to put 500,000 miles on the car.
(even then, why not wait?) Use google (groups) to see how many Honda
owners have no-start-on-hot-day problems. It's NEVER the fuel pump.
'Curly'
>
> Thanks guys. Those sites make sense. I am ordering a main relay now.
> Actually, I plan on doing the pump and cleaning grounds, later on, as
> preventive maintenance for a 192k mile car.
>
========================
Forget the pump, unless your goal is to put 500,000 miles on the car.
(even then, why not wait?) Use google (groups) to see how many Honda
owners have no-start-on-hot-day problems. It's NEVER the fuel pump.
'Curly'
#6
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Fuel pump relay
"Van" <not@this.time> wrote in
news:fohYe.1722$vw6.366@newsread1.news.atl.earthli nk.net:
> Thanks guys. Those sites make sense. I am ordering a main relay now.
You could save yourself considerable money by resoldering it yourself.
If you already have a soldering iron and electrical solder(not plumbing
solder).
--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
kua.net
news:fohYe.1722$vw6.366@newsread1.news.atl.earthli nk.net:
> Thanks guys. Those sites make sense. I am ordering a main relay now.
You could save yourself considerable money by resoldering it yourself.
If you already have a soldering iron and electrical solder(not plumbing
solder).
--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
kua.net
#7
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Fuel pump relay
Jim Yanik <jyanik@abuse.gov.> wrote in
news:Xns96D8C15C45204jyanikkuanet@129.250.170.86:
> "Van" <not@this.time> wrote in
> news:fohYe.1722$vw6.366@newsread1.news.atl.earthli nk.net:
>
>> Thanks guys. Those sites make sense. I am ordering a main relay now.
>
> You could save yourself considerable money by resoldering it yourself.
> If you already have a soldering iron and electrical solder(not plumbing
> solder).
>
http://www.marklamond.co.uk/howto/el...main-relay.htm
--
TeGGeR®
The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
www.tegger.com/hondafaq/
news:Xns96D8C15C45204jyanikkuanet@129.250.170.86:
> "Van" <not@this.time> wrote in
> news:fohYe.1722$vw6.366@newsread1.news.atl.earthli nk.net:
>
>> Thanks guys. Those sites make sense. I am ordering a main relay now.
>
> You could save yourself considerable money by resoldering it yourself.
> If you already have a soldering iron and electrical solder(not plumbing
> solder).
>
http://www.marklamond.co.uk/howto/el...main-relay.htm
--
TeGGeR®
The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
www.tegger.com/hondafaq/
#8
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Fuel pump relay
Repairing the relay worked great. It was faster than installing a new one
since the relay could not be removed without removing the guages. I just
pryed the tabs apart and removed the circuit instead of the whole thing.
Sure enough, the solder joints for the coils on the relays were cracked.
Not just the fuel pump relay but also the EPU relay. Funny thing is that I
repaired relay boards for interphone systems in my old job. The relays
themselves were what failed most often so I have lots of experience
unsoldering and resoldering in new relays. This was a lot easier.
"TeGGeR®" <tegger@tegger.c0m> wrote in message
news:Xns96D8D67B322AEtegger@207.14.113.17...
> Jim Yanik <jyanik@abuse.gov.> wrote in
> news:Xns96D8C15C45204jyanikkuanet@129.250.170.86:
>
> > "Van" <not@this.time> wrote in
> > news:fohYe.1722$vw6.366@newsread1.news.atl.earthli nk.net:
> >
> >> Thanks guys. Those sites make sense. I am ordering a main relay now.
> >
> > You could save yourself considerable money by resoldering it yourself.
> > If you already have a soldering iron and electrical solder(not plumbing
> > solder).
> >
>
>
> http://www.marklamond.co.uk/howto/el...main-relay.htm
>
> --
> TeGGeR®
>
> The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
> www.tegger.com/hondafaq/
since the relay could not be removed without removing the guages. I just
pryed the tabs apart and removed the circuit instead of the whole thing.
Sure enough, the solder joints for the coils on the relays were cracked.
Not just the fuel pump relay but also the EPU relay. Funny thing is that I
repaired relay boards for interphone systems in my old job. The relays
themselves were what failed most often so I have lots of experience
unsoldering and resoldering in new relays. This was a lot easier.
"TeGGeR®" <tegger@tegger.c0m> wrote in message
news:Xns96D8D67B322AEtegger@207.14.113.17...
> Jim Yanik <jyanik@abuse.gov.> wrote in
> news:Xns96D8C15C45204jyanikkuanet@129.250.170.86:
>
> > "Van" <not@this.time> wrote in
> > news:fohYe.1722$vw6.366@newsread1.news.atl.earthli nk.net:
> >
> >> Thanks guys. Those sites make sense. I am ordering a main relay now.
> >
> > You could save yourself considerable money by resoldering it yourself.
> > If you already have a soldering iron and electrical solder(not plumbing
> > solder).
> >
>
>
> http://www.marklamond.co.uk/howto/el...main-relay.htm
>
> --
> TeGGeR®
>
> The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ
> www.tegger.com/hondafaq/
#9
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Fuel pump relay
This is a very common problem. My son's car had the problem. It is
caused by a bad solder joint on the relay. It can be fixed with a
solder gun, once you get the darn thing out! Or, since you went to
all that work, replace it.
On Tue, 20 Sep 2005 04:12:34 GMT, "Van" <not@this.time> wrote:
>I finally tracked down my intermittent no start condition on my 92 prelude
>Si. If it is a hot day (90+), the car needs to sit until cool or it won't
>start. For some reason it wouldn't start today when I tried to start it
>this afternoon after it sat all day in the afternoon sun. I put my fuel
>pressure gauge on it and it read zero. I tried tapping on the relay I
>thought controlled the fuel pump but it didn't help. I decided to take the
>car apart tomorrow and let the car sit and cool off this evening. Sure
>enough, the car started fine tonight. Would temperature effect the relay
>like this or the pump? Or the ground taps? Pressure, when I have it, is
>right on the manual's specifications.
>
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