91 Honda Accord SE/Ignition

1991 HONDA ACCORD
170,000 MILES • 4 CYL • FWD • AUTOMATIC
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KFRESE
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hanks for having me guys. I have a 1991 Honda Accord SE. The Problems all started when I thought I could do the timing belt change myself. Had issue with tension, so got help from friend,got it aligned then went to start no spark. bought new coil,didn't work, got ingnitor then I got spark, but ran light crap. Hired mechanic from craigslist, came out, said I had bent valves, got refurb head back on, ran great after that for about 3 weeks. Then when car would get warmed up, the tachometer would start to jump erraticaly while drive, bogging out car and then sometime die. Problem got worse and worse until very weak to no spark. I bought new distributor from ebay. Installed, same thing. Got car to shop, they said bad ignitor, car started burning up their ignitors,and another distributor. Then they said that the battery was overcharging to 18 volts. They stated the alternator was putting out fine,so they put new battery same thing. So thats where we are at, usually once care drives for a little while ignition starts to fail horribly. Please help, my shop is scratching there head. Whats left? Computer? Voltage Regulator? Bad Wiring? I can tell you when I tried to do timing belt I ran the car for 3-4 minutes with no alternator belt hooked up, could I have done some damage? Hope this helps! Thanks guys
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Jul 15, 2011 at 3:07 PM
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MHPAUTOS
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If the battery is over charging it will be the regulator in the alternator at fault, this is the only item the controls the charging output, get the readings fore the alternator, they should be no greater than about 14.5V, post the actual reading here if in doubt.
Jul 16, 2011 at 11:27 AM
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KFRESE
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apparently the shop put a new battery, they said the previous battery was defective, they called me to pick up car, said they replaced computer and they drove for a day no problems, when I picked it up and drove off, it started again, tachometer going erratic, then to zero and dying.
Jul 19, 2011 at 11:48 PM
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RIVERMIKERAT
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Check the wire feeding the tachometer for faults to ground. What kind of voltage and current is the alternator putting out?
Sep 27, 2011 at 3:54 AM
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JACOBANDNICKOLAS
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IT sounds exactly like he mentioned. If you are producing 18V to the battery, it will destroy the battery and burn out electrical components. The alternator has a voltage regulator in it. That sounds like where the problem is coming from. Have the alt checked at a parts store. Most will do it for free and post what they tell you.
Sep 27, 2011 at 3:55 AM
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RIVERMIKERAT
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Jacob, it seems like a few states have banned that practice, because consumers were being misled and misinformed. AND because the aftermarket auto repair industry loses money from it. California parts stores are no longer allowed to offer diagnostic assistance.
Sep 27, 2011 at 4:07 AM