Backyard mechanic here, facing a question that Google can't find an answer for.
Can an igniter fail intermittently?
1991 Civic Si
On Sunday, while driving, the engine died on me. No joy getting it started, though it cranked hard. I checked for spark with a timing light and discovered I was getting none. I opened up the distributor and saw that the ignition coil had suffered some kind of small explosion that had damaged the dizzy cap, too. The part that connects to the coil to deliver power to the rotor through the cap had been blown off.
coil.jpg
I replaced the coil, rotor, and cap and the car started just fine. I drove without issue for two more days until it died again on me. I opened up the distributor but found no signs of the same explosion. The only thing damaged was that cap-to-coil contact point. But, this time, it wasn't blown off; it just snapped cleanly. Defective cap? Maybe, but it seemed too coincidental. I replaced the cap again but it didn't start. Replaced the spark plug wires, didn't start.
So, I pulled the igniter out and did this test on it:
Testing the igniter (ICM) off-the-car which showed me that my igniter was fried. I swapped it out with another one a few hours ago and now the car runs. Didn't change the coil nor the rotor.
What I'm thinking is that the first time the engine died, the igniter failed in the "on" position, letting the coil blow up. The second time the engine died, the igniter failed in the "off" position, hence why the coil was undamaged.
If that's true...
1. The igniter had to have begun working again after the first incident.
2. Why did the coil-cap connection just break off in the second incident?
Some background information:
Incident 1: I was accelerating uphill in North Van having driven from Richmond. Engine temperature was normal.
Incident 2: I was idling coming up to a stop sign. Happened within 1 minute of starting the car. It had been sitting for 1.5 hours before that.
Electrical issues aren't my favourite, and certainly not my expertise. Thanks for any input!