Electric Spark noise from under dash when turning ignition key

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by Pszemol, Apr 25, 2009.

  1. Pszemol

    Pszemol Guest

    2004 Accord 2 door EX-L.

    Is it normal that I hear some heavy electric sparking from some relay under
    the dashboard when I turn the ignition key slower than normal?

    I took it to the dealership today and they told me (without hearing, just
    based on description) that that is normal and all hondas do that.

    If this is normal - does it cause premature relay contacts wear out from all
    this sparking?
     
    Pszemol, Apr 25, 2009
    #1
  2. Pszemol

    Tegger Guest



    Do you hear the "sparking" at the very same time as the Check Engine light
    comes on and goes off?
     
    Tegger, Apr 25, 2009
    #2
  3. Pszemol

    Pszemol Guest

    No, "check engine" light stays solid on when sparking can be heard.

    It seems to me that this is not fully engaged starter relay.

    When I am moving the key slowly to the start position first I hear
    one subtle relay click which blanks off the radio panel, when I do
    continue slowly turning the key I hear second subtle relay click
    which turns off the blower motor and then, when I continue to
    turn the key slowly I hear the fountain of electric sparks sounds
    and then the starter engages and the motor starts with no problem.

    Is there a starter motor relay under my dash on the left side of
    the steering column? Is it possible that this is what I hear?
     
    Pszemol, Apr 25, 2009
    #3
  4. Pszemol

    Tegger Guest



    Your Main Relay/s is/are in fact in that location.

    I think you may be turning the key TOO slowly, causing the relay to buzz.

    The ignition switch is not meant to be between positions for extended
    lengths of time except during troubleshooting. You are meant to turn the
    switch to each position fairly quickly.

    What happens if you
    1) turn the key quickly to "I", then wait a bit, then
    2) turn it quickly to "II", waiting AT LEAST TWO SECONDS, then
    3) turn it quickly to "III" until the engine starts?

    Any "sparking" noise now? Or just heavy clicks as the Check Engine light
    comes on and goes off?
     
    Tegger, Apr 25, 2009
    #4
  5. Pszemol

    Pszemol Guest

    Why is it buzzing instead of staying on in place?
    It looks to me that too much current is flowing through the ignition
    contacts!

    Too much current causes sparks and arcing intermittent/nonexistent current
    flow through the starter relay, which controls much bigger current and now
    much more audible buzzing sound.

    This arcing over time would cause relays to burn...
    Hm...

    I just checked - no matter how slow I try to turn the ignition key in my
    other car (toyota camry) I am UNABLE to cause any buzzing noise or
    sparks... At some moment the starter engages and I cannot do anything
    about it other than just release the pressure on the key and disengage
    the starter or just keep pressing the ignition key and continue starting.

    Something is definitelly worse in the honda design if they rely on
    the driver speed of turning this key to prevent relay arcing...

    Is honda known for more problems with relays than toyota?
    No noticable arcing when I turn ignition key into the position III
    *quickly*.
    Just starter engages and the engine starts.

    Just because I am not noticing it does not mean it does not happen.
    The arcing, if it is noticable when turning the key slowly it will be there
    when turning key quickly, only will last shorter (i.e 50-100ms instead of
    500ms).
    Even short arcing times the number of engine starts = premature failure...
     
    Pszemol, Apr 25, 2009
    #5
  6. Pszemol

    Tegger Guest



    Because you're forcing the relay's contacts to just barely make contact
    for too long. It's possible to do this with ANY relay if you do things
    "just so".





    No, you're simply turning the key too slowly.

    Why are you doing this? Are you /trying/ to find trouble where there is
    none?





    Well sure, if you insist on being silly about it.

    In normal use most drivers simply twist the ignition switch right around
    from "0" to "III" without any pauses at all. (That in itself is bad, but
    for different reasons.)




    Different setup. Toyota only engages the fuel pump once the engine is
    turning, so no current will flow until the engine cranks.






    Of course. At some point you will complete the circuit to the starter
    solenoid and the starter will engage. You must /really/ be trying to
    find problems where none exist.





    You'd think, except that this does not translate into the real world.
    Nobody other than people trying to find non-existent problems do what
    you do.





    In the days when Honda combined two relays into one, yes. But that was
    due to the sheer mass of that combination, which mass caused the famous
    Honda PGM-FI Main Relay problems for so many years. That problem and its
    solution remains one of the most popular pages on my site.

    But since ~2005, Honda has split the Main Relay into two parts like
    everybody else, so the old problems are probably gone for good.




    Then everything's just dandy.

    Maybe you should stop trying to find problems where they don't exist. Do
    you want to maintain a good relationship with your dealer, or do you
    want to make them hide under their desks when they see you coming?



    It doesn't work that way, sorry.
     
    Tegger, Apr 25, 2009
    #6
  7. Pszemol

    Pszemol Guest


    Well, not sure if this is the fuel pump problem... it does not consume
    so much current as the starter motor does. I suspect this to be the 'starter
    cut relay' which is buzzing in my car.

    In the car service manual, on page 4-5, there is a wiring diagram
    which surprises me - there is the ignition switch pictured there, which
    is powering the starter cut relay coil AND at the same moment also
    the starter solenoid, consuming a lot of current used to move the
    starter switch into the ON position.

    When I compare the same part of the wiring diagram in my toyota
    camry I see there totally different picture... from the electrical point
    of view, of course. In toyota, the starter relay coil only is powered
    from the ignition switch. The starter relay contacts, the ones providing
    power to the actual starter solenoid, are powered straight from battery
    and the current flowing through the starter solenoid is NOT flowing
    through the ignition switch in toyota.
    I am not sure if you read this carefully - I am UNABLE to repeat
    the same in toyota. The key at some point makes the contact
    and this is it: no buzzing, no arcing - the starter is engaged and
    it is turning.

    But it does not happen with honda - at some angle of the turned key
    the starter relay is just buzzing, not making the contact... The weak
    ignition switch is strugling to close the circuit of the starter relay coil
    AND at the same point RELAY'S OWN POWER CONTACTS!
    This should not happen!

    I wonder how this wiring diagram looks like in the newer models.
    Tegger, do you have any newer Accord service manual? 2008 maybe?
    Would you mind scanning this one manual page for me, please?

    If the problem was non existent than I could not find it...
    I would not find it with my toyota - because there is no problem there.


    My car is registered April 2004.
    It must have been made earlier than that...

    :)) I wish it was just dandy.

    It would be dandy if I could not hear this arcing...

    Well, my "relationship" with the dealer is not really my big concern :)

    :)) and yet honda has the famous relay problems but toyota does not...
    What a concidinky ;-)
     
    Pszemol, Apr 25, 2009
    #7
  8. Pszemol

    Pszemol Guest

    Here is the illustration, may be a helpful aid to the text above:
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/37558759@N06/sets/72157617280874226/

    I am still interested if this part of the wiring diagram changed in 2008.
     
    Pszemol, Apr 25, 2009
    #8
  9. Pszemol

    Pszemol Guest

    Similar circuit in an old generation toyota camry (pages ST-3, ST-24):
    http://www.turboninjas.com/camry/st.pdf
     
    Pszemol, Apr 25, 2009
    #9
  10. Pszemol

    Tegger Guest



    If you're so concerned, why don't you just sell this car and buy another
    Toyota?

    There are no TSBs or other known issues with your model's ignition system,
    so whatever you're seeing isn't the problem you think it is. Maybe that's
    why the dealership told you nothing was wrong.
     
    Tegger, Apr 25, 2009
    #10
  11. Pszemol

    Pszemol Guest

    Well, my 2-door accord looks more pretty than toyota ;-)
    The mechanic should not tell me nothing is wrong without seeing the car
    and hearing the noise himself. That was in my opinion not very professional.
     
    Pszemol, Apr 25, 2009
    #11
  12. Pszemol

    jim beam Guest

    Pszemol wrote:
    ygtbfsm.

    in our next segment, "professional" psychic vehicle diagnostics!!! more
    news at 11.
     
    jim beam, Apr 25, 2009
    #12
  13. Pszemol

    TomP Guest

    Pszemol,
    Here is what Honda has to say about the subject:

    From Honda ServiceNews October 2001

    Starter Relay Buzzes
    If you turn the ignition switch very slowly to start
    the engine, all Honda models except Passport
    have this little quirk: the starter relay buzzes. If
    your customer complains about it, don’t spend
    your time trying to fix it; there’s really nothing
    wrong. Just tell your customer to turn the ignition
    switch a little faster, and the relay won’t buzz.

    --
    Tp,

    -------- __o
    ----- -\<. -------- __o
    --- ( )/ ( ) ---- -\<.
    -------------------- ( )/ ( )
     
    TomP, Apr 25, 2009
    #13
  14. Pszemol

    Tegger Guest



    Now why didn't I look that one up myself? I have that issue, too.

    I wonder if the Chev Cavalier and Pontiac Sunfire do this also? They have a
    similar "pump run" period at KOEO.
     
    Tegger, Apr 25, 2009
    #14
  15. Pszemol

    Pszemol Guest

    Interesting, thank you...

    So it is starter relay, not the fuel pump relay, Tegger?
    Have I misunderstood you were mentioning something
    about different fuel pump wiring in toyota? Please explain...
     
    Pszemol, Apr 26, 2009
    #15
  16. Pszemol

    jim beam Guest

    give it up dipshit. the only problem with your vehicle is the loose
    screw behind the steering wheel.
     
    jim beam, Apr 26, 2009
    #16
  17. Pszemol

    Pszemol Guest

    Don't be such a cave man, jim... where are you manners?
     
    Pszemol, Apr 26, 2009
    #17
  18. Pszemol

    Tegger Guest



    The fuel pump relay.



    The Toyota setup passes no current to the fuel pump until the engine is
    turning (when key is turned to "start"). The Honda setup passes current to
    the fuel pump for two seconds when the key is first turned to "II" (BEFORE
    the key is turned to "start").

    If no current is passed, no relay activity is possible.
     
    Tegger, Apr 26, 2009
    #18
  19. Pszemol

    jim beam Guest

    and the honda way is the /right/ way.
     
    jim beam, Apr 26, 2009
    #19
  20. Pszemol

    Pszemol Guest

    As you probably noticed, I was refering to the text written by honda
    titled "Starter Relay Buzzes". Is honda wrong claiming it is starter relay?
    I understand the statement you make about the differences between
    the honda and toyota designs in respect to powering fuel pump.

    What I have found comparing STARTER wiring diagrams between
    these two cars has nothing to do with the fuel pump. Honda service
    buileting also references STARTER relay, not fuel pump relay...
    Yet you still are talking about the fuel pump relay... why is that?
    This statement is of course true, but which relay are we talking about?
    If the relay is energized already in the ON position (II) than it cannot
    be buzzing any way when I am turning the key from II to III position.
    Is the state of the fuel pump relay changing when I turn the key from
    II to III or does it stay energized?
     
    Pszemol, Apr 26, 2009
    #20
Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments (here). After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.