Ever used an ignition module tester? (Page 1/2)
fierobear OCT 23, 12:23 PM
I've had one of these ignition module testers for years, and finally used it yesterday. Seems pretty slick. Anyone else used these?

Patrick OCT 23, 02:52 PM

quote
Originally posted by fierobear:

I've had one of these ignition module testers for years...



I think I have the same tester downstairs... sitting unused ever since I bought it over a decade ago.

When you tried it, did it heat the ICM up?
fierobear OCT 23, 07:43 PM

quote
Originally posted by Patrick:

I think I have the same tester downstairs... sitting unused ever since I bought it over a decade ago.

When you tried it, did it heat the ICM up?



I didn’t touch the ICM during the test, but it only uses a 9 volt battery. It wasn’t hot to the touch a few seconds after the test. I doubt it’s enough current to cause any heat, but I’ll check it out.
Patrick OCT 23, 09:57 PM

quote
Originally posted by fierobear:

I doubt it’s enough current to cause any heat...



That's always been my concern with these inexpensive testers. As a lot of us have unfortunately experienced, even a bad ICM can work... until it gets hot. If the tester itself isn't able to get the ICM hot, then it may be next to useless for all practical purposes.
pmbrunelle OCT 23, 11:37 PM

quote
Originally posted by Patrick:

That's always been my concern with these inexpensive testers. As a lot of us have unfortunately experienced, even a bad ICM can work... until it gets hot. If the tester itself isn't able to get the ICM hot, then it may be next to useless for all practical purposes.



Someone could try putting the ICM in their kitchen oven at 250°F or so, with the tester itself outside the oven, using sufficiently long enough wires to link both items.

No joking around here, that's standard testing practice for new product development at my employer. Except our ovens are nicer than second-hand garage sale units with grease dripping. They also cool things down in addition to heating stuff up.

[This message has been edited by pmbrunelle (edited 10-23-2019).]

theogre OCT 24, 09:39 PM
Is an issue for "Real" testers used by stores and shops.
You need to heat them but not too much or good ones will fry.

Often ICMs like many "MIL Spec" parts can take more heat then normal electronic sold to public but does have upper limits to run right.
Problem is that limit is nearly never publish by GM or anyone else. If you find thermal specs make sure that come from a real source like GM Delphi Wells etc.
Delphi publish many part specs but I never seen any ICM thermal data.

So feels hot often doesn't mean anything. Hot you can't touch maybe.
Now if you had FLIR, Cheap IR unit, thermocouple, etc. that reads the "bottom" above 150-180°F during a test then likely getting too hot for a test w/o anything heat sinking.
Large MOSFET(s) is(are) attach to the metal "Bottom" depending just what ICM is. When you read temp of ICM bottom then the MOSFET(s) are often many degrees hotter and maybe near at or above the limits. More so not mounted to a distributor etc.
(HEI has at least 1 Power MOSFET. DIS has at least 1 per Coil controlled.)

IOW Don't think 9v battery can't kill them or hurt you.
Shorted "small" batteries can cook whatever connected, itself and you. If left Can burst the case spraying contents on you. Standard and Alkaline are not as bad as LiIon but not fun either.

------------------
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(Jurassic Park)


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PatrickTRoof JAN 20, 02:07 PM
That's really cool. Would you mind telling me the make and part number of the tester?

Thanks

[This message has been edited by PatrickTRoof (edited 01-20-2021).]

fierobear JAN 22, 02:26 PM

quote
Originally posted by PatrickTRoof:

That's really cool. Would you mind telling me the make and part number of the tester?

Thanks




I bought this years ago, at a Napa parts store. I just looked at their web site, it's not listed. I found one on eBay

https://www.ebay.com/itm/Ka...7:g:1G4AAOSwWUJf52PD

[This message has been edited by fierobear (edited 01-22-2021).]

PatrickTRoof MAR 16, 07:10 PM
I found one on eBay as well. It's definitely a very handy tool!
reinhart MAR 18, 07:04 AM
Safe to say it can identify some bad ones but not all.