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Car Forum / Hyundai Cars / June 2006

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Help from Hyundaitech for my 97 Elantra

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Rick - 06 Jun 2006 15:09 GMT
My poor ol 97 Elantra's(240,000 miles) check engine light has come on. It's
still running, but not well. Replaced the wires and plugs and it still has a
slight miss and low power. Anyway I had it scanned at Autozone and it gave a
code that the Cam Position Sensor was showing high resistance. In your
experience does these sensors get weak(they're magnetized) or go bad. I
would suppose if it was shot the car wouldn't run at all, but I'm just
guessing there. I understand it could be anywhere in the system associated
with this sensor up to and including the ECM.

Thanks,
Rick
Tunez - 06 Jun 2006 15:49 GMT
Rick, my wife had a similar problem just the other day. Her 2003 Santa Fe
was fine when she went to work but on the way home the check engine light
came on and she suffered a loss of power and a skip, I drove it when she got
home and the damn thing would barely make it up the incline in the driveway.
took it to the dealer that night and they found a bad relay in the console.
Hard to believe that a $4.00 part would cause that much trouble.

Tunez

> My poor ol 97 Elantra's(240,000 miles) check engine light has come on.
> It's
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
> Thanks,
> Rick
Rick - 06 Jun 2006 15:58 GMT
Dang, thanks for the input. That's what worries me about this deal. It could
be something as simple as a relay like you had or worse. I just hate
throwing a bunch of money at it because of the miles that's on the car. If
it's the sensor I'll replace it, but I don't want to spend the 75-100 bucks
on it and that not take care of my problem and then find out it's some
inexpensive relay in an out of the way place

Thanks,
Rick

> Rick, my wife had a similar problem just the other day. Her 2003 Santa Fe
> was fine when she went to work but on the way home the check engine light
[quoted text clipped - 19 lines]
> > Thanks,
> > Rick
hyundaitech - 06 Jun 2006 18:17 GMT
I've only seen the P0340 code for two reasons:

The camshaft sensor has failed (most frequent), or the camshaft timing is
out of synchronization.  

The vehicle will run with a failed cam sensor, but you're likely to feel
some hesitation and lack of power.  It typically won't cause a misfire,
though.
Rick - 06 Jun 2006 18:35 GMT
THANKS, Hyundaitech. I sure appreciate it. I think I'll go ahead and order
the sensor. I had the timing belt replace about 20,000 miles ago so I'm
fairly confident the cams are OK. Sure glad you're onboard here!

Thanks,
Rick
SGF, Mo.

> I've only seen the P0340 code for two reasons:
>
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> some hesitation and lack of power.  It typically won't cause a misfire,
> though.
 
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