2013-07-20 Ignition is still working like normal.
Our friend’s 97 Honda Odyssey (300k+ miles) dies while driving, starts right up, drive again and dies any time it wants to. By Googling on the net, everything points to the ignition switch. He took it to the shops and some say it’s the fuel pump (yes possible), some say it’s the distributor (this is not likely), whatever it is, they will charge $70 for diagnostic of the problem up front. I looked at the car, the first thing is he has lots of weight on the key chain, this is not good for the ignition lock, he will remove the key chain and leave a single key to start the car. I starts the car, wiggle the key, a little left, a little right and the car dies, the contacts must be loose in the ignition switch. To be sure, we took out the ignition switch (behind the ignition lock). We took off everything cover the steering column, it wasn’t necessary, we only need to remove the knee bolster part and not the steering column.
Remove the negative cable from the battery first.
There are 3 screws that hold the knee bolster in place and a few clips on the panel, 2 on the right and 1 inside the coins pocket.
Carefully to unsnap these clips on the panel to the body and remove the knee bolster.
Crawl under the steering column, we should see the ignition switch behind the ignition lock cylinder.
Remove the screws and slide it out to test.
We can reconnect the battery, stick a slot screw driver in the old ignition switch and turn clock-wise 3 steps and it should crank and start the car. Wiggle the screw driver, we can feel it’s loose (springs are weak internally) and dies intermittently. Autozone happens to have one in stock, we bought a new one and replace it for $61.
Remove the battery cable again to install new ignition switch.
Unplug the connector from the side fuse box on the bottom left and cut these tight wraps holding the cable in place.
Plug the new ignition switch in and test with the screw driver first to make sure it works before putting in the lock cylinder (plug in then reconnect battery), it’s very tiring lying down under the steering column. If it works, disconnect the battery then run the cable the same way as it was and install the tie-wraps to the same locations. Put back the 2 golden screws, make sure don’t strip them with wrong size Philips screw driver.
Now, re-connect battery ground cable and starts the car, it should starts right up, solidly and you can feel the key too.
Cheers,
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9 Comments
Your posting helped me immensely. This was the exact problem we were having and I’m pretty positive it is the fix. The 99 Odyssey is a little more difficult to change out (you do have to take the bottom cover off the steering column and a cover to the fuse box below) but it was relatively easy. I did the same diagnostic test you show on the youtube video and it was clearly the same challenge. A trusted mechanic confirmed the likely diagnostic. The new ignition switch is in and it seems to work like a charm. Tons of thanks!
I’m glad that the post helped you.
Cheers,
Louis