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Old 12-18-2011, 10:46 PM   #4
redsupra
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Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Melbourne
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pwpanas View Post
1) The Mkiv's coils can't be properly tested, except under load
2) I'm pretty sure that Toyota still sells the plastic coil connectors. The oem plastic gets hard, brittle and cracked. Let me know if you need the part number.
3) Did you replace all of the coils? If not, they all usually begin to 'wear out' within a few thousand miles of the others, so you'll likely need to replace the others eventually if you haven't already. However, you should get at least 125,000 miles out of a set of coilpacks.
4) For whatever it's worth, your symptom and the fix don't really go together. Weak coilpacks fail to ignite the air/fuel mixture under hard boost. They don't cause "higher than normal revs at idle when the engine is warm". If you ask me to guess, I'd say your so-called mechanic fixed a vacuum leak he didn't mention to you, while selling you coils you probably didn't need. *shrug*
5) I'm pretty sure that Toyota would still sell you an entire primary wiring loom. Warning - it's quite expensive $850USD+. Not sure why you're concerned about replacing the 'pig tail' ends. *shrug*
6) You should never solder a harness/loom. A proper 6-sided crimp with shrink-wrap is the only thing that should be used on any wiring in a moving vehicle.
7) Those plastic connectors go bad because of heat. Anything you can do to reduce under-hood heat will help them last. For example, have you considered a vented hood?

Either way, congrats on the fix. Glad it worked out for you.
All I can say is that the new coils have solved the problem, but to answer your comments:

1. No idea. I'm not an auto electrician, but the guy I went to knows his stuff.
2. Toyota do sell the OEM coils, but far more expensive than the after market ones available. The Super Spark I got claim better performance than the OEM too. They are also available locally surprisingly enough. http://www.superspark.com.au/
3. All 6 coils and connectors replaced. Wasn't going to stuff around any more. If 2 were bad the rest were on their way out already.
4. It was an auto electrician that replaced the coils. He wouldn't be fixing a! vacuum leak. Also I had to source the coils, he just did the labour. And still what can I say: new coils, problem is gone. Revs sit rock steady at idle now where they should.
5. Toyota don't make the wiring loom any longer, not that I needed it anyway. The auto elec said the wiring was fine.
6. The advice from the guy at Suprastore.com was to solder the connection. In the end it's up to the auto elec, he's the expert so he did what he knows best.
7. Nope. They last coils went nearly 18 years before going bad and I don't drive the car as much these days anyway, so not an issue. Vented hood is another expense I don't need just now!
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