The ECU knows at all times where the engine position is by comparing crank and cam sensor readings, and fires the ignition outputs accordingly. I'm only using 2 ignition outputs (for a 2 coil pack, waste spark system) I could tell just by how it sounded, the galloping lethargic attempt at starting. Lord knows I've had enough experience with faulty ignition systems in the past to tell when somethings wrong


It was all of the above


I would thought so too except I got another FPR from a Subaru wreckers who said it came off a working engine, and it does exactly the same thing as the old FPR. Not a drop comes down the return line when the engine isn't running. Or as I discovered today, even after the engine had run for a minute or two. There was still no fuel in my milk bottle catch can at the rear of the car, where I had the return line routed just before it went back into the tank. I need to investigate this further.El_Freddo wrote: ↑Fri Jan 05, 2024 6:38 pmIn my mind the fuel pressure regulator should be dumping as much fuel as possible in the return line at idle and when the engine is off.
Have you heard your fuel pump prime and are you getting fuel at the intake manifold from the inlet hose and the return hose?
Yes it primes and yes there is fuel going into the rails up front, I sprayed myself in the face with it today when I pulled a hose off after I thought I'd bled down the pressure, fuel pump hadn't even run for 2 hours by that point.
Not sure how to answer this, I've only ever had the one Haltech connected to it. I've been trying different base maps and configurations for cam and crank sensors for a day and a half. Rang the tech support number and the helpful bloke on the other end was able to remote log in to my laptop and change settings, turns out I wasn't that far off. He left me at saying the sensors were reading all good, it should be running based off what he could see. He recommended to check fuel and spark. This is when I cleaned the injectors and replaced the coil then, bingo
