2001 Jeep Cherokee 4.7L V8 P0352 Fault: Coil Circuit Short, PCM Issues, and Wiring Diagnosis
I'm experiencing a persistent P0352 diagnostic trouble code on my 2001 Jeep Cherokee with the 4.7L V8 engine. The issue appears to stem from a melted wire connection at the coil connector. I've already replaced the spark plug and installed a known-good coil, but still see the P0352 code. After testing, there is no continuity between the coil's primary wire and battery power when connected to the new connector (wired with heat shrink). A 5V signal is detected at the coil terminal while the engine is running using a digital voltmeter (DVA), and I confirm that pin #9 has continuity to the connector. Battery voltage is present on the battery feed side of the connection. Despite these checks, no power is observed on the control circuit when the plug at the PCM is disconnected. I've also found foaming oil residue in the spark plug hole—cleaned it out with compressed air before reinstallation. I'm wondering if there's a short elsewhere in the harness or whether the issue lies within the PCM itself. Any guidance would be greatly appreciated.
Use a test light at the same point where you observed 5V during engine operation. The light should pulse, indicating that the Powertrain Control Module (PCM) is actively sending a control signal. If it doesn't pulse, this may indicate a faulty PCM driver circuit.