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I have an '85 4+3 which was unintentionally laid up for 3-months. When I recovered the car, battery was dead. Charged it overnight. Car started immediately - for about 15 sec. then died and would not restart. Cranks fine. My garage has had it for 6-weeks and has: Replaced fuel pump & distributor. No Go. Only oddity: low voltage at the injectors. I am running out of ideas.
[QUOTE=AGENT 86;1585575387]How low is low voltage at injectors ?
How many volts at brake fuse and gages fuse (ignition on) ?
Any stored codes in ECM ?
Is there injector pulse ?
If the battery is good enough to crank the engine then it should have enough voltage to pulse the injectors. Once the engine starts the alternator is supplying the voltage, so the battery is essentially out of the picture.
How did they determine that the voltage was low at the injectors?
You can measure the voltage by pulling off one of the injector connectors, turning on the ignition and measuring the voltage referenced to ground (any metal part of the engine). It doesn't matter which pin on the connector you probe. You should see basically battery voltage -- about 12 to 13 volts.
They did as mentioned and found less than 12v. There was NO injector pulse.
The voltage comes from the INJ1 and INJ2 fuses, which get power from the ignition switch -- it should be the same as the battery voltage.
The ECM turns on the injectors with a large power transistor inside the ECM. If that transistor is bad you would see the symptoms you describe. Substituting a known good ECM would eliminate that as a problem.