Charlie207
Full Access Member
I know LS coils are pretty durable, but I'm having a hard time finding a procedure for testing them, with in the car, or on the bench.
Does anyone have a tip or two?
Does anyone have a tip or two?
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Easy way? Swap wires and see if the misfire follows. Are you trying to address a code? What is the code or problem?
I checked and Haynes Manual does not show any testing procedures for the V8 coil packs, only for the V6 engines, which are obviously different.
There's a guy on the GMT400 forum that swore LS coil packs fail left and right, Monday tru Sunday (same guy also says the SBC is superior because it has ONE coil pack vs 8, LMAO!) Anyways, I've been driving these engines (high 200k+ mileage too) now for a few years and thousands of miles and I can now say he's full of $hit. I'm sure they do in fact fail (what doesn't?) but the failure rate seems very low, especially the OEM ones.
You can probably get a good one, and compare the resistance to your 8 on the bench.
Or, I'd say just swap one by one on a known good vehicle and drive it a few days, if you don't get a misfire, put a piece of tape and label it: GOOD.
Interesting, I thought these coils are the same: just a copper-wound (or aluminum?) transformer, no different than the older ones?I've never opened one up...but probably just windings.some info.
using LS coils as wasted spark
curious about swapping my DP car over to LS but still running the EEC and will continue to so with a simple plug and play reversible harness i can make will my car be able to run LS coils due to the cturboford.org
while you might be able to fire the coil in open air, you can't really test if they will fire a plug properly under load that's why it's standard practice when getting missfie code to swap the coil with another cyl. to see if the miss follows the coil.
not saying old guy us right, but they do kinda fail more often than what old guys are used to. it could purely be the odds of it happening is higher with 8 than one. or we seem to have gone backwards in quality parts wise. old coils might just have been better. I had a 96 with 325k when I sold it.. still on the oem coil. I got my 2011 with 130isj on it and it's already had one changed out.
now that said, the ls coils are very much more complicated. lots of electronics to fail in them. old coils are mostly just a transformer. ls coils do put out more spark power too.
Interesting, I thought these coils are the same: just a copper-wound (or aluminum?) transformer, no different than the older ones?I've never opened one up...but probably just windings.
What electronics are you talking about?
The SBC Vortec are notorious for having the ignition control module fail. The standard procedure is for guys to replace the ICM along with the coil. Coils are probably okay, but you know the parts changer mentality: "oh, I'm going to replace it since it's got *** miles." The ICM has that thermal paste, and a lot of guys blame that for failures; I don't know if that's true TBH. Most will recommend having an extra ICM in your glovebox in case you are need it, along with a cap and rotor because it's failed on them at least once. I'm glad that system was phased out because in my experience, a failure will leave you stranded: engine completely dead. And aftermarket replacement parts are notoriously poor quality, which doesn't help either.
A failure in an LS coil and you can at least get off the road with a misfire. The ECU doing the switching internally I guess replaced the ICM (?) Very rare for ECUs to fail. If anything, I think the LS are way more reliable on this aspect, but it's okay if you disagree.
The 8 coils having more power than 1 is more like a performance thing.
Carburators? That's WAY before my time, so I can't argue about anything carbs. Heck, my Dad hasn't even owned a carbureted vehicle since the 80s.each ls coil a 100% has electronic circuits in them. they are not just coils like back in the day. they get more complicated the newer you get too, Google ls smart coils for info on that stuff. the best place to learn what it takes to fire ls coils is going to be the megasquirt message boards, they will have diagrams and stuff for you.
again, which is better? we aren't going to even go back to one coil and dizzy. but I will say this, when a obs loses spark you can fix it in a parking lot for cheap by replacing 2 or 3 parts from any parts store. an ls ign starts messing up there's pages and pages of trying to fix random misfires and nonsense. it might be better but it's definitely not more simple. but same could he said for a carb.
