repeated coil failure in 2000 lexus es 300
#1
Driver School Candidate
Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: mt
Posts: 4
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
repeated coil failure in 2000 lexus es 300
greetings:
I replace all 6 original coils with aftermarket coils once the originals started failing. Now, two of these aftermarket coils from Orielly's have failed within a few months of installing them and i am fearful the other four new coils will follow suit.
I should also note that all of the 6 new spark plugs that were installed at a toyota dealership at 105,000 miles only last till 120,000 miles when all six plugs were replace during one of tyhe coil replacement visits. these were $10 spark plugs that are designed for the car which only last 15,000 miles! why such a short life?
is it common knowledge that only toyota brand coils should be used or am i just experiencing some bad luck with these aftermarket coils?
I have received refunds from the two $60 coils that have went bad because there is a 1 year warranty... if the other start failing, should i take the other four back and replace all 6 with the toyota brand coils? about $110/per at dealership.
Can you buy original coils online for cheaper??
any advice you can provided is much appreciated.
I replace all 6 original coils with aftermarket coils once the originals started failing. Now, two of these aftermarket coils from Orielly's have failed within a few months of installing them and i am fearful the other four new coils will follow suit.
I should also note that all of the 6 new spark plugs that were installed at a toyota dealership at 105,000 miles only last till 120,000 miles when all six plugs were replace during one of tyhe coil replacement visits. these were $10 spark plugs that are designed for the car which only last 15,000 miles! why such a short life?
is it common knowledge that only toyota brand coils should be used or am i just experiencing some bad luck with these aftermarket coils?
I have received refunds from the two $60 coils that have went bad because there is a 1 year warranty... if the other start failing, should i take the other four back and replace all 6 with the toyota brand coils? about $110/per at dealership.
Can you buy original coils online for cheaper??
any advice you can provided is much appreciated.
Last edited by shoover; 12-27-11 at 08:40 AM.
#2
Lexus Champion
greetings:
I replace all 6 original coils with aftermarket coils once the originals started failing. Now, two of these aftermarket coils from Orielly's have failed within a few months of installing them and i am fearful the other four new coils will follow suit.
is it common knowledge that only toyota brand coils should be used or am i just experiencing some bad luck with these aftermarket coils?
I have received refunds from the two $60 coils that have went bad because there is a 1 year warranty... if the other start failing, should i take the other four back and replace all 6 with the toyota brand coils? about $110/per
any advice you can provided is much appreciated.
I replace all 6 original coils with aftermarket coils once the originals started failing. Now, two of these aftermarket coils from Orielly's have failed within a few months of installing them and i am fearful the other four new coils will follow suit.
is it common knowledge that only toyota brand coils should be used or am i just experiencing some bad luck with these aftermarket coils?
I have received refunds from the two $60 coils that have went bad because there is a 1 year warranty... if the other start failing, should i take the other four back and replace all 6 with the toyota brand coils? about $110/per
any advice you can provided is much appreciated.
At least the front ones are easy to get to should they fail prematurely
Last edited by PFB; 12-25-11 at 10:05 PM.
#4
Lexus Champion
#7
The OE coils can last a very long time -- Why did you replace them all? My oldest Lexus a 2000 has over 225k on it and four of the coils are original.
You replace them when they fail -- the toyota coils are not like some VW coils that had a plastic case problem ........ with those you replace all the same production tun.
I have used aftermarket coils with no problems on my Lexus.
You replace them when they fail -- the toyota coils are not like some VW coils that had a plastic case problem ........ with those you replace all the same production tun.
I have used aftermarket coils with no problems on my Lexus.
Trending Topics
#8
#11
Super Moderator
Coils in these engines do last. I lost one about 6 years ago when I was cleaning the throttle body and it was just an excess buildup that must have gotten to one of them. Overheating is usually the killer for the coils, but otherwise 5 of the 6 in my 1MZFE RX300 are still running since new. Coils are usually one of the things on my vehicle that I keep OEM whenever possible, but I can completely understand tight budgets in this economy if you have to get something non-OEM.
#12
I think there's something more going on, I have a hard time believing that many coils are failing on their own. Maybe a bad grounding issue? Are there any other electrical issues? How are you making sure the coils have actually gone bad? One way to check is to swap the coils around and see if the failure follows it.
These type of coils are certainly not a regular "disposable" part like spark plugs that you normally just throw away after a certain amount of mileage. Going through 8 coils in a short amount of time is very suspect.
Also, I would echo the sentiment that if money is really tight, go get some replacements at a salvage yard rather than aftermarket. This is one of those cases where OEM is really better. Sewell is a good online dealer where you can get factory parts for substantially less.
These type of coils are certainly not a regular "disposable" part like spark plugs that you normally just throw away after a certain amount of mileage. Going through 8 coils in a short amount of time is very suspect.
Also, I would echo the sentiment that if money is really tight, go get some replacements at a salvage yard rather than aftermarket. This is one of those cases where OEM is really better. Sewell is a good online dealer where you can get factory parts for substantially less.
#14
Lead Lap
iTrader: (1)
I would go with OEM as well. Just looked up the price on my "go-to" Lexus dealer's website and it's $71.44/ea. I highly recommend this dealer, if you're interested in getting OEM coils.
http://www.trademotion.com/partlocat...=1&catalogid=2
http://www.trademotion.com/partlocat...=1&catalogid=2
#15
Driver School Candidate
My 99 has 6 coils. 2 years ago one of them on the rear bank went bad. I replaced that one from a salvage yard coil. The very same one (last one on the rear bank closest to battery), went bad again in about six month. I went & bought a new one from stealership and no problems since then. For what it is worth...