I have a question, I have two camshaft sensor plugs on a Acura K20A2 engine and the first plug's power wire is at 10.00 DCV and the othe plugs wire is at 1.00 to 3.00 DCV and the first plug's switch wire is at .100 -.200 ACV when engine is cranking while the other one is pretty much at almost nothing. So is the low voltage camshaft sensor wire bad? Plus how do I fix this problem or what is going on. Please Help.
on my audi a3 1.8se 2000 model computer has thrown error code 00515 camshaft position sensor hall effect SHORT TO GROUND.i had the camshaft sensor replaced along side the crankshaft sensor.symptoms are limp mode,heavy fuel consumption,cutting out.please advice how to fix this short to ground error,as the car been in the garage for 2 weeks and still not fixed!!! please help
I think you have Bosch Motronic M2.5 fitted, which uses an inductive crank sensor and not hall effect so wont have any power as it produces it own, see my video on Testing Crankshaft Position Sensor (inductive). I would volt drop all the earths and lives to the ECU, if ok I would look at the camshaft sensor, I think it is in the distributor and would be hall effect, but I think they changed pin numbers around 1991 so you would need the correct wiring diagram to test.
Hi. I have a j reg vauxhall astra 2.0 16v engine. There is no power going to the crankshaft sensor at all and no signal going to the coil amplifier. I have carried out continuety checks, replaced ecu and crank sensor. Do you have any ideas what could be wrong? I think possibly immobilizer?
The early type of Hall switches fitted to distributors had a 12v supply voltage, but as with most modern electronics (USB on PC etc.) they all work on a 5v supply voltage, this is the case for most vehicle sensors fitted now, from a air flow to throttle position. The early Hall type switch just operated a simple amplifier where a modern one sends information to the ECU/ECM to be processed. The 5v supply voltage will come from the ECU/ECM.
i'm going to make a comment i think you are wrong with the kind of sensor you are testing because all the specification i've seen about hall type sensors they have 12 volts also they have 5 volt signa and ground and your specifications may be are for another sensor can you explain me why doesn't have 12 volt this hall type sensor of yours thanks wait for the answer
Hi, it is unlikey to be the cam sensor if it starts once, more likey to be a immobilizer type problem, if you watch the video again we check a the three wire hall type cam sensor with meter set to volts not ohms. Try a spare key if you have one.
hello!!my car starts but the engine stops immediately..I suspected the cam sensor coz it dont have any reading any of the 3 terminals using a ohm meter.....is the cam sensor defective??hpoe u camn help me tnx a lot!!
I did not know the GIECO Lizard fixed cars ...
MrMicraphone 4 weeks ago
I have a question, I have two camshaft sensor plugs on a Acura K20A2 engine and the first plug's power wire is at 10.00 DCV and the othe plugs wire is at 1.00 to 3.00 DCV and the first plug's switch wire is at .100 -.200 ACV when engine is cranking while the other one is pretty much at almost nothing. So is the low voltage camshaft sensor wire bad? Plus how do I fix this problem or what is going on. Please Help.
KuBurd1 3 months ago
free wires? sick
joshua565 6 months ago
Nice Videos, cheers!
2025axlrose 6 months ago
Hi, I don’t understand the error code 00515 engine codes normally start with a ‘P’.
However ‘SHORT TO GROUND’ sounds like the wiring loom has chaffed on the engine or bodywork
AskTheMechanicCoUk 7 months ago
on my audi a3 1.8se 2000 model computer has thrown error code 00515 camshaft position sensor hall effect SHORT TO GROUND.i had the camshaft sensor replaced along side the crankshaft sensor.symptoms are limp mode,heavy fuel consumption,cutting out.please advice how to fix this short to ground error,as the car been in the garage for 2 weeks and still not fixed!!! please help
lowrida9999 7 months ago
Most Vauxhalls flash the engine management light if the immobilizer is the fault.
AskTheMechanicCoUk 7 months ago
I think you have Bosch Motronic M2.5 fitted, which uses an inductive crank sensor and not hall effect so wont have any power as it produces it own, see my video on Testing Crankshaft Position Sensor (inductive). I would volt drop all the earths and lives to the ECU, if ok I would look at the camshaft sensor, I think it is in the distributor and would be hall effect, but I think they changed pin numbers around 1991 so you would need the correct wiring diagram to test.
AskTheMechanicCoUk 7 months ago
Hi. I have a j reg vauxhall astra 2.0 16v engine. There is no power going to the crankshaft sensor at all and no signal going to the coil amplifier. I have carried out continuety checks, replaced ecu and crank sensor. Do you have any ideas what could be wrong? I think possibly immobilizer?
MrVoltron1986 7 months ago
Sensors and wiring can be affected by temperature change and vibrations. DTC are very useful with intermittent problems.
AskTheMechanicCoUk 8 months ago
all my test checkout good but the DTC code says its intermittent can this be when the vehicle is running the problem starts?
westcoastlife4show 8 months ago
Yes thats right, it is switching on and off, the meter just shows the average voltage
AskTheMechanicCoUk 8 months ago
if you had used an oscilloscope, we would have seen a square signal going from zero to five volts right?
yorchais 8 months ago
The early type of Hall switches fitted to distributors had a 12v supply voltage, but as with most modern electronics (USB on PC etc.) they all work on a 5v supply voltage, this is the case for most vehicle sensors fitted now, from a air flow to throttle position. The early Hall type switch just operated a simple amplifier where a modern one sends information to the ECU/ECM to be processed. The 5v supply voltage will come from the ECU/ECM.
AskTheMechanicCoUk 10 months ago
i'm going to make a comment i think you are wrong with the kind of sensor you are testing because all the specification i've seen about hall type sensors they have 12 volts also they have 5 volt signa and ground and your specifications may be are for another sensor can you explain me why doesn't have 12 volt this hall type sensor of yours thanks wait for the answer
theASEtech 10 months ago
KEVIN SMITH would love your channel. Can anyone guess why?
sleepinggiant90 1 year ago
Hi, it is unlikey to be the cam sensor if it starts once, more likey to be a immobilizer type problem, if you watch the video again we check a the three wire hall type cam sensor with meter set to volts not ohms. Try a spare key if you have one.
AskTheMechanicCoUk 1 year ago
hello!!my car starts but the engine stops immediately..I suspected the cam sensor coz it dont have any reading any of the 3 terminals using a ohm meter.....is the cam sensor defective??hpoe u camn help me tnx a lot!!
rhydz1 1 year ago