A few days after my 1970 suffered a sudden roadside failure (see Silly mistake causes highway breakdown and tow back home) the same happened with my 28k mile 1993. After the tow-of-shame home with my neighbors watching the drop-off, I broke open the service manual and Tech 2 to diagnose the problem. First issue: the Tech 2 would not connect; second issue: both cooling fans turn on with the ignition even though the engine is cold. The manual’s “crank-no start” diagnostic chart A-3 concluded a bad distributor (RPM indicated during cranking [NO] à terminal C grounded? [YES] à terminal D grounded [YES] à Faulty Distributor).
Since I replaced the infamous Opti-spark 5,000 miles ago with an upgraded Petris vented unit and it’s bone dry, I was skeptical with this diagnosis. So I scheduled a call with the owner and founder of Petris Enterprises, Chris Petris (you too can schedule a free consultation through their website). His conclusion: 99% sure it’s the ECM, not the distributor. And the likely cause is the all-to-common broken solder joints on the circuit board. Why? Apparently not being able to connect the Tech 2 and continuously running cooling fans are two big tells of ECM failure. Although Chris was generous enough to spend 40 minutes on a phone, it actually only took him 5 minutes to reach this conclusion, but we spent the rest of the time chatting about his company’s rebranding as Throwback Automotive and keeping the company family owned.
His recommendation: Ship the ECM to SIA Electronics for testing and repair. 10 days later my ’93 was back on the road and running great. Sure enough the cause was several failed solder joints.
Lessons:
Mark
Since I replaced the infamous Opti-spark 5,000 miles ago with an upgraded Petris vented unit and it’s bone dry, I was skeptical with this diagnosis. So I scheduled a call with the owner and founder of Petris Enterprises, Chris Petris (you too can schedule a free consultation through their website). His conclusion: 99% sure it’s the ECM, not the distributor. And the likely cause is the all-to-common broken solder joints on the circuit board. Why? Apparently not being able to connect the Tech 2 and continuously running cooling fans are two big tells of ECM failure. Although Chris was generous enough to spend 40 minutes on a phone, it actually only took him 5 minutes to reach this conclusion, but we spent the rest of the time chatting about his company’s rebranding as Throwback Automotive and keeping the company family owned.
His recommendation: Ship the ECM to SIA Electronics for testing and repair. 10 days later my ’93 was back on the road and running great. Sure enough the cause was several failed solder joints.
Lessons:
- Refer to the manual for diagnosis but rely on a trusted resource. If you have a C4 LT1, Petris and SIA are great resources to keep you on the road.
- A clean, low mileage C4 is a bargain. Their low market price may be due in part to their sullied reputation for ECM and distributor failure. But with the above resources (and a Tech 2) they can be a fun, attainable, easy to repair sports car.
- As insurance during road trips, today I purchased a spare ECM on eBay and will have it tested by SIA.
- Experiencing two road side failures a few days apart in separate Corvettes makes a guy rethink his choice of pass times.
Mark
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