wellthatwasdumb
Member
- Joined
- November 11, 2012
- Messages
- 15
- Reaction score
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- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 1997 Ford Explorer
Hey guys, I have a problem that I need some help with. I am troubleshooting a friend's 97 Ford Explorer 4.0 that sat for four years and was supposedly running when it was parked, but is now not getting a spark at the plugs. I made the gloriously stupid mistake of attempting to hook the battery up backwards, and current was flowing for a solid two seconds before I realized what I was doing. Now my problem is that I am not getting a spark at the plugs, and I suspect I may have fried the PCM. I do not know whether it was sparking before I hooked the battery up backwards, but the owner says that he got it to sputter using ether six months ago, so I'm assuming that spark existed. I have checked all of the fuses for the PCM, and they are all good, and the PCM relay is clicking. I switched the AC and PCM diodes in the fuse box under the hood thinking that the diode was possibly bad, but still nothing. Both diodes read ~56k ohms in the direction of the current flow, which seems way too high to me, but my meter is a POS, so the readings might be wrong, and at any rate, the relays are clicking. I plugged a basic computer diagnostic scanner up to the diagnostic port, and it seems to read the computer fine, but the computer isn't throwing any codes, which I find odd. The ignition was off when the battery was being connected, but it seems that on some cars, the PCM can fry with reverse current flow even with the ignition off.
From what I've gathered from searching on the internet, this ignition system has three main parts: the crankshaft sensor, which sends a signal to the PCM, which the PCM uses to determine ignition timing, and then sends a ground signal to the coil pack to initiate ignition, so it seems I have three possible culprits. My first question is: does anyone have any knowledge of an instance where someone hooked the battery up backwards on an Explorer with a similar ignition system, and if so, what was the result? Second question: is there a way to test the PCM and crankshaft sensor that does not require specialized equipment? Third question: does anyone have a link to the procedure to test the coil pack? Fourth question: what is the procedure for replacing the PCM? A guy at O'Reilly's told me that there are three different PCM models for this specific year and engine. I assume that I will need to find a computer with the same 'AJB' code that this computer has. Is that all? Are they plug and play, no reprogramming required? Fifth question: what the hell was I thinking?
Thanks in advance.
From what I've gathered from searching on the internet, this ignition system has three main parts: the crankshaft sensor, which sends a signal to the PCM, which the PCM uses to determine ignition timing, and then sends a ground signal to the coil pack to initiate ignition, so it seems I have three possible culprits. My first question is: does anyone have any knowledge of an instance where someone hooked the battery up backwards on an Explorer with a similar ignition system, and if so, what was the result? Second question: is there a way to test the PCM and crankshaft sensor that does not require specialized equipment? Third question: does anyone have a link to the procedure to test the coil pack? Fourth question: what is the procedure for replacing the PCM? A guy at O'Reilly's told me that there are three different PCM models for this specific year and engine. I assume that I will need to find a computer with the same 'AJB' code that this computer has. Is that all? Are they plug and play, no reprogramming required? Fifth question: what the hell was I thinking?

Thanks in advance.