Fried ECM on 1992 Chevrolet C1500 TBI After Jumper Wire Mistake - Code P12 Detected
I recently had a serious issue with my 1992 Chevrolet C1500 4.3L engine, which has over 220,000 miles. The motor was rebuilt at 179,000 miles and I installed a new TBI (Throttle Body Injection) system in December. A few days ago, the truck began running poorly and eventually the catalytic converter caught fire. After removing the cat and installing a test pipe, it still ran extremely rough and was clearly running rich. I don't have an OBD-II scanner, so I used a jumper wire to retrieve fault codes — all I got was code 12. In my frustration, I forgot to remove the jumper wire before attempting to start the engine, which led me to try starting it with the jumper still connected. As a result, I now have no spark at all and suspect I may have damaged the ECM (Engine Control Module). The truck previously ran perfectly, so this sudden failure is very concerning. I’ve checked fuses and confirmed they are fine. There’s only 10.89V at the ignition coil, and no voltage on the injectors (red and white wires). When I disconnected the injectors, there was still no power — indicating a possible wiring issue under or near the air filter assembly. I’ve searched online and found many similar cases where users report 'dumping' fuel symptoms without any codes. However, none have successfully resolved it. My truck is now completely non-responsive with no spark, and I’m not sure if this was caused by a wiring fault or an ECM failure due to the jumper wire incident. I'm looking for advice on how to diagnose this properly — especially whether the lack of spark means the ECM is fried or if there's another electrical issue that can be fixed without replacing the entire module.
Hi, I have a Ford Fiesta diesel and am having trouble starting it. It seems to want to start but won't — similar symptoms to what you're describing. Any advice on diagnosing fuel dumping or no-start issues with older TBI systems?