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Temperature Issues Panama City FL

It's important to keep in mind that all electronic vehicle components are exposed to temperature extremes and thus are vulnerable to temperature-related failures.

Emerald Coast Automotive Repair, Inc.
(850) 769-6933, 001-2004
1115 West 15th Sreet
Panama City, FL
Adams Tank & Lift North
(850) 914-0373
Panama City, FL
Adams Tank & Lift North
(850) 914-0373
Panama City Beach, FL
Big Bike Superstores Honda
850-763-0691
100 W 15th St
Panama City, FL
Precision Tune Auto Care
850-767-0444
1214 Airport Road
Panama City, FL
Grease Pro
(850) 784-4433, 001-2004
219 Harrison Avenue
Panama City, FL
Safelite Auto Glass
(888) 820-2558
2808 N East Ave Suite A
Panama City, FL
Dover Cylinder Head Inc
850-785-6569
2704 W 15th St 98
Panama City, FL
19th Street Auto Center?
850-769-9643
1220 W 19th St
Panama City, FL
Smileys Auto Detailing
(850) 215-5335
931 Harrison Avenue
Panama City, FL
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Temperature Issues

By Gary Goms  
August 01, 2007

Solving temperature-related, no-code intermittent failures can be a frustrating experience for the diagnostic technician because the exact level of heat or cold needed to trigger the failure is often hard to duplicate. It's also important to keep in mind that all electronic vehicle components are exposed to temperature extremes and thus are vulnerable to temperature-related failures.

Early in my electronics diagnostics career I had to deal with a 1980s-model Nissan pickup that wouldn't start when ambient air temperatures dipped below 20° F. One shop had already replaced the engine coolant temperature sensor in an effort to solve the problem and, because no data stream information was available on that model of Nissan, I was left with pin-testing individual sensors in freezing temperatures. Unfortunately, the vehicle would start as soon as the ambient air temperature rose above 20° F, so the diagnostic process would be put on hold until colder weather prevailed. Why 20° F had become the threshold temperature needed to trigger the failure, I can't say because I could rarely duplicate the required temperature condition. In this case, the temperature-related failure might have been caused by a faulty winding in an ignition coil or solder joint in the circuit board of a computer, ignition module or air flow sensor.

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