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Omega General Help / Re: Mis-firing following crank sensor replacement
« on: 30 December 2016, 21:03:09 »Do you have a code reader, or access to one? Looking at the year of the car I'm not sure wether mine will be of any use...perhaps someone can confirm that a '97 car can be 'plugged in'Where abouts in West London are you as there may well be a member near you who can help.
If you are Reading, as your profile says, Nitro, I am about 10 miles from you.

The mechanic has a reader that connects to my car, (the old one from the bottom of his van, that he didn't bother to throw out!), he got a code 19 originally before changing the sensors, but wasn't getting any error codes when he checked it last time he worked on it.
He's convinced that it is something other than the crank sensor - and he is usually right - he's the primary reason that the car has done nearly 200K miles and is (well it was before this) still going strong.
It's just that reading the FAQ's here about changing the sensors, and being an electronic engineer myself, I know that these things can be pernickerty. And it bothers me that the replacement part apparently wasn't Bosch branded, when it should have been. But I don't know where to look for it to see for myself what - if any - markings there are on it.
But the mechanic was having a really bad week when he last worked on it, besides not being well and pushing out a bunch of other jobs to spend 2 days working on my car in two weeks, and at the end of it she still wasn't purring for him so he was very demoralised.
He's a good man and would have pushed himself too hard trying to get it fixed before Christmas, but he and his health are more valuable to me than having the car fixed immediately.
I might be expecting too much here, I know a fair bit of what he has done to the car recently, but not enough to answer all the questions, so this could end up as a three way conversation, needing the involvement of the mechanic!