DarkFlame
New Member
1998 Civic LX, stock from original dealer purchase in late '97.
The car died at a stop light, and the cause was a blown distributor - diagnosis was done by me and confirmed professionally. New distributor was installed, and the car started and ran immediately.
However, the CEL came on immediately & will not go off. The code is 420, which corresponds to a number of things, starting with a bad catalytic converter (replaced March, '13, so I know that is not the trouble), and including poor timing that causes an inefficient burn, resulting in the car thinking the converter is bad.
When we replaced the distributor, the engine was in the exact same position putting on the new distributor as when we took off the old one. The engine was set at 0° TDC for removal and never moved during the 20 minutes it took to install the new one.
However, the engine does have a slightly different sound from pre-distributor-replacement. I think the timing is off ... just a hair. Changing the timing is easy, just twist the distributor .001° and retighten the bolts.
But, how can I tell, other than the sound, that I have it right - WITHOUT having to reset the CEL and then see if it re-appears???
Do I need a timing light? or is there some other way?
I'm thinking of taking it to a pro to let them set it, but would prefer to do it myself.
THANKS!!!
The car died at a stop light, and the cause was a blown distributor - diagnosis was done by me and confirmed professionally. New distributor was installed, and the car started and ran immediately.
However, the CEL came on immediately & will not go off. The code is 420, which corresponds to a number of things, starting with a bad catalytic converter (replaced March, '13, so I know that is not the trouble), and including poor timing that causes an inefficient burn, resulting in the car thinking the converter is bad.
When we replaced the distributor, the engine was in the exact same position putting on the new distributor as when we took off the old one. The engine was set at 0° TDC for removal and never moved during the 20 minutes it took to install the new one.
However, the engine does have a slightly different sound from pre-distributor-replacement. I think the timing is off ... just a hair. Changing the timing is easy, just twist the distributor .001° and retighten the bolts.
But, how can I tell, other than the sound, that I have it right - WITHOUT having to reset the CEL and then see if it re-appears???
Do I need a timing light? or is there some other way?
I'm thinking of taking it to a pro to let them set it, but would prefer to do it myself.
THANKS!!!