Every time I have a problem and search it on RUclips its always Eric the car to the rescue. I tell you Eric is the most valuable RUclipsr in my opinion. THANK YOU Eric the car guy for making all these wonderful helpful videos still providing assistance to people many years after you upload them.
Just wanted to send out a HUGE THANK YOU ERIC!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! My Legend died a couple of years ago, so she has been parked in the garage under the car cover (she is my Sunday driver). Had a ot of medical issues, so she had just not been on the priority list. Decided it was time to figure out what was going on with her. Watched your video and voila! She started and we went and stretched her legs a little last night and going for a longer stretch today! Now to get her tags renewed and we are GOLDEN!!! You saved me a fortune and got my baby back to me!!! Thanks so much!!!!
THANK YOU SO MUCH!!! I just walked to Auto zone to buy a fuel pump and trying to see how to install on RUclips found this video. Not only did I save $100 bucks I fixed my ride. Hell ya..
My '88 CRX w/ 225,000 miles refused to start at work, I came home and watched your video, had a friend drive me back, p/u the relay, did the repairs as on your vid, took the relay back, and boom, car started first time. A Big Thank you for posting this vid, it saved me a towing fee ! Thanks again !
So four years of trying to figure out why my 95 Honda Accord would always start cold but fail to restart after a short stop (like at the gas station) any time the temperature got >75 degrees. Popped out the relay and one solder joint was definitely bad while 3 more were questionable. Cleaned up and resoldered all 4 joints and now IT IS FIXED!!! Thank you so much!
D4 Ignition Switch can cause that .. mine did freaked me out .. when it lit up D4 going down the highway. The Car quit when I was in rush hour at a traffic light and you know horns blasting and people screaming and me trying to get the thing off the road - tranny stuck in gear and I forgot all about the key press to get it out of gear to push the thing..
I had this frustrating problem for several years. An Australian mechanic suggested the same fix - solder the contacts on the circuit board. Took less than ten minutes and solved the problem ... 6 years and counting! Thanks for sharing.
I just want to say thank you very much. After a few hundred dollars attempting to fix a random shut offs and no starts, I came across this video and bam fixed. Pulled the relay out and the same pin was cracked all the way around it. Re soldered and no more issues. I'm sure the part companies hate you but you sir are a modern hero
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU!!! This saved me $50 bucks since I didn't have to buy the new Relay!! 2000 Honda Odyssey was intermittently not starting, so I looked online and this was the first thing that came up. I re soldered the relay and boom!! BACK IN ACTION!! Thanks Eric!!
So your Odyssey did start at times? I would think with a bad solder joint it would never start? I've got an odyssey that isn't always starting when I need it to.
My odyssey main relay decided to fail while driving to Alaska from New Jersey; We opened it, and sure enough, found the bad solder joint. Thank you Eric for getting us all the way to the Arctic Ocean and back!
Hope this is read as constructive criticism and not hating cause I really like Eric's vids and want to help him and all of you when soldering. When you solder, make sure the soldering iron is at full temp first, clean the tip of the iron thoroughly, then pre-tin it a bit so it shines. Hold tip of iron against the clad board and against the wire at the same time, hit with some solder till it surrounds the whole area, remove tip of iron, and walla, you will have a very solid, clean and professional solder joint that should not have any issues for many years. Balling it up might work for a while, but it won't last long. Thanks for the video Eric, you've helped me in the past and I hope this will help you in return.
Hey thanks for the video I have been workin on my friends car for the past few days and this video really helped. He had told me that he had replaced the main relay so I had just skipped over it a few time since he "just replaced" it. come to find out he had been swappin out the starter relay and i found that out after askin him to show me what he had done so far. Oh the joys of working with people
You need to hold the soldering iron tip to the lead and the pad on the circuit board, heat it for a few seconds, apply FLUX CORED solder, should look like a hershey's kiss when done.
One month ago I repaired the relay on my 2000 Accord. It went out again yesterday. I removed the relay and found a half dozen cracked (cold) solder joints. I removed and reflowed the solder on all the solder joints. It works like a champ. Thanks again Eric!
PERFECT! had a intimitant starting issues for years, yesterday the car flat out refused to start. found this video and some help on the del sol forum and less than 10 minites my car is working again. awesome!
Hey Eric, I don't know if you still check the comments on such an old video, but I just wanted to say thank you for this video! A friend needed help diagnosing a no start issue and I was chasing relays and fuses for hours and was almost certain the fuel pump was dead. It didn't sit easy with me since they are usually reliable so I sat down and did some research on what else to check. Your video popped up and it was EXACTLY what was needed. Was able to reflow the solder on the relays and BAM car came right back to life and saved my friend a hefty mechanics bill. Thanks for all your videos! You've taught me so much and gotten me out of many tight spots!
Eric, wonderful video! So grateful you showed the second kind of main relay at the end of the video as that was the kind I had on my 1991 Honda Accord. With a magnifying glass I was able to find the circumscribed crack on the solder joint you pointed out. More than 10 years after you posted the video it is still being a blessing to backyard mechanics. WIshing God's blessings back at ya! Thanks again!
The lead free solder used in electronics today doesn't work as well as the older tin/lead solder. The tin/lead solder can still be found where you can buy stained glass supplies, but I'm not sure if it has flux built in. You may need to buy that separately. Anyway, don't attempt to solder until the iron has reached maximum temperature or you get a joint like we saw in the video. You not only want the part hot, you also want the circuit board pad hot so the solder will bond tightly to it. It will actually wick to it. You'll know it when it happens. Waiting for the iron to get hot also minimizes the heat that goes into the surrounding circuit board or into the part because the job gets done quickly. It also helps to prevent the foil on the board from lifting. After soldering, you should also clean off the excess flux. Flux is acidic and over time, if it remains on the board, it can eat away at the circuit board foil. This is especially true for very thin foil traces. It can actually eat them in two. The key to a good solder joint is practice. Soldering is a skill that gets better with practice. Thanks for all the great videos. Keep up the good work.
Greetings from the UK Eric, thanks very much for taking the time and effort to show this problem on the Honda Civic I striped down the relay and found exactly what you have shown. If people only knew how much time and effort it takes to put a video on RUclips to help others there would never be any criticism, so thanks very much for sharing this information as you have saved me and many others hundreds of pounds, if I see you in my local pub I'll buy you a beer !!!! Thanks.
@x360ps3fan Ignition switches have been a problem on Honda's for years, in fact I do hope to make a video on one but I haven't had one come in in some time. Thanks for your input and comment.
Dude man your a life saver, My car hasn't started for a month and after I saw this video and checked my main relay and wiggled it a bit it started right up. I had cracks in the Main Relay that prevented spark to my car. Keep up the good work man and thanks again for this video.
my 2001 odessy was acting crazy , stopping in traffic , would turn over but not start for about 10 minutes then it woulod start and run like new , sometimes for an hour or a week or several months then do it again , This fixed the problem. I re soldered all of the joints on the board. I tried to use a small pen iron like in the vid but it just didnt get things hot enough so I used an old 100 watt gun and it did the trick
Same issue. Whenever I stopped to fill up with gas, always had difficulty starting the ol ZC. I took my good ol misuba, gave it the solder treatment, that was 10 years ago, and it's still going strong. Cost -- $15 for soldering iron. Love your work Eric. Stay dirty man.
Just fixed my 99 Accord with this same issue. Thanks Eric! However, I strongly recommend re flowing all solder joints and adding solder as needed. A solder joint can be bad/weak even though it may visually appear good/strong. Since it takes mere seconds to re flow a single joint, you might as well do them all. Be careful not too let the joint heat up for too long or you can damage the resistors on the back side.
@TrickyNekro Your most welcome, sorry I just get a bit worn out sometimes but your right it could have been a better job especially if I replaced the tip on my soldering gun, it's been overdue for some time. Thanks again for your comments I really appreciate it.
@Dillonj177 Unless it has an aftermarket fuel pump already in it it's probably not the fuel pump if it's not starting because of a lack of fuel pressure. Honda fuel pumps hardly ever go bad.
Just want to say thank you Eric. Took your advice, removed the main relay and I had 3 areas that needed resoldered, and that's what I did. Hopefully takes care of it.
@MrGLENWOOD2 It sounds like you may have more than one issue. Start with any check engine lights you might have, if you don't have any look to the general things like tune up items and vacuum leaks. Good luck.
Hi Eric I have a 2013 Honda Civic SI and out of the blue it quit an I towed it home an it turns over perfect but don't start. Changed the fuel pump cause I didn't hear it come on an the new one which is good don't come on. I used starting fluid an it starts. Check all the fuses an some of the relays. Does a 2013 Civic have a main relay? Also I changed the 2 big battery fuses, which were fine. If you can help that would be so awesome I have been walking to work an just got K pro an want to drive her. Thank you in advance.
@Ericthecarguy also when I goto hook up flash pro to find out the check engine light it says it can't communicate. Tried a couple times, an yes my cig lighter/acc fuse is good. If you can solve this with those specs your a boss! An my fuel pump relay is good too. Checked them with a multimeter. Don't know an can't find if it has a main relay. If you can't help can you at least answer that? Thank you Eric I'll light them up for ya an tell her who fixed her! Haha
I had just bought a 93 del sol from my friend about two weeks ago and after about 20 min running i shut off the car and wouldnt start again. long story short, i watched this video, resoldered the joints and voila!!! started right up... no problems since. Thanks again!!!!
My Accord now starts like a charm!! After following the tutorial by @EricTheCarGuy everything just works perfect. Thanks a lot man!!! This issue has been troubling me since I got the car 8 years ago. I changed almost everything on the ignition system and every time I was amazed that the problem wasn't fixed. Now it starts with absolutely no problem!
i replaced my cap/rotor/coil/plugs/wires/fuel filter and 3 rotted out grounds before finding the brilliance to pull the relay and conduct this free repair well at least spark and fuel will continue to be delivered haha was stalling intermittently and sometimes no start after engine was warmed
@TroyBoy4201 Be sure to check for fuel pressure before you condemn the main relay, the no start could have another cause as well. Thanks for the comment and good luck.
Bro, many thanks to you for taking the time and making this video, my mechanic took my gas tank down and replaced the fuel pump and the car still didn't start(97 Acura TL), i came on youtude desprate and came across this video, i took the relay off and followed your directions and now the car is candy, If you ever come to Nassau Bahamas, i work at the Atlantis Resort i will treat you to a free dinner to any of our 5 star restaurants, just email on youtube.
You have great video's but that solder joint is terrible. Being in electronics prior, you should remove the old solder then resolder. Other than that, great videos.
He is using the wrong technique to solder - that is why it is terrible. Sure he could clean it - your average DIY'er here probably will not have the tools to do that - I usually heat and sling it when I don't have my sucker or any braid.
Man, Loved this. been wrestling with my relay for a cpl months trying to cool it on hot days because I didnt want to spend the cash, but its been dead for two days now. 10 minutes after watching the video I had my relay repaired and back in and the car started right up! Thank you for saving me cash!
Thanks Eric! My uncle's car died at my house ('98 Accord), and I don't no nothing bout fixin no cars ...but I can solder. I had that main relay out, soldered and fixed in 10 minutes flat after watching this and looked like The Man! True, YOU are the man, but I gladly took the credit. :)
It is EricTheCarGuy and not the SolderGuy. His technique was correct, in that he applied the heat to the item needing soldering and the heat transfered to the solder causing it to flow, and not the to the solder of the joint directly, which creates as better bond and reduces the likely hood of a cold joint. He could have just heated the joint and let re-flow. The blob shape would not create problems here as it did not cross any other circuit path, it would just look neater and uniform if he had used less solder.
***** The correct way to solder properly is; to first heat the solder gun tip well, then touching the soldering joint with it in order to heat that properly, (it helps if putting just a little bit of new solder on that tip before hand, but not to solder with it but to be able to transfer heat to the solder joint faster..) and once the solder joint is finally hot enough, only then you touch the solder-joint with the soldering wire. NOT the soldering IRON, but Always the soldering-joint directly. This is due to the soldering paste which is in the soldering wire already, and it comes out once it's melted....
Electronics Technician here. I did board-level, through hole electronics repairs for many years in the 90's. The secret to good soldering is to heat the base of the circuit board with a hot iron, apply a little bit of solder, then move the soldering iron up the wire. A good solder connection will appear shiny. A dull or solder connection that appears to form a ball is called a cold solder connection and will eventually fail. Use some soldering wick to remove the solder and try again. Make sure you do not overheat the circuit board too much or you will lift the copper trace off the circuit board.
if you was right here where i live i'd buy you a drink you literally just fixed my car i couldn't get it to start for nothing took the relay off opened it didn't see any visible cracks but seeing how i work on electronics i reflowed all the solder joints and added fresh solder put it back in my car and she started right back up thanks you just got a subscriber
Just wanted to let you know that this solved my problem on my 01 accord f22. Really stumped me for a while because I had just changed the oil pump seal and timing belt so naturally I was looking at timing. Came across your video's and looked at my main relay. I have the second mitsushiba model you showed and found 2 solder points that were cracked. Thanks a ton for doing what you do man!
@oscarswallow It may not be this relay however as it could also be the electrical portion of the ignition switch that could also cause that symptom. This only works if the car does not have fuel pressure. Thanks for the comment and good luck.
You, as always were spot on and I was able to repair the bad solder utilizing the millions of American Tax dollars training from the US Navy on how to solder!!! Thanks again sir, you are the best!
Good job dude. Nobody had a video on taking out the fuel pressure relay that's under the dashboard, but you did mention how to pry it open and just leaving the housing in with the bracket. I will only add this to the viewers is that in order to take out the connector plug you need to press on the plastic lock clip in order to release the wire connection.
I had my accord with a local mechanic for no start for 3 days and they changed "Ignitor" and "Reprogrammed" the key but they could not make it start. Bill was pilling over 300 already and still no start. So, I checked this video and went to the mechanic and told him to check main fuel relay...which I force them to do, then you know what...exactly!!!! - bad main fuel relay it is. Now I have doubt that they charge me for things that I really didn't need. Thanks Eric, you are such a help.
Thanks for the tip, we just went ahead and bought one for my son's 95 Accord. It was only about 50.00 and fixed the problem right away. It took about 10 min to replace. Thanks again!
i have a 91 civic si and my car was not starting. when i turned the key to power on i wouldent wear the fuel pump and when i tried to start the car it would just crank but not turn over. i had no clue what was going on. so i seen this video and i did everything eric said, now my car starts fine. im so happy with the results. i soldered every joint on the main realy and it realy worked, thanks much eric!
I used to have a 1988 Prelude that had this exact issue as described. Very hot interior and the car wouldn't start. Cool interior, and it would start. It was super bizarre and through reading I found out this was the culprit. I resoldered the joints in the main relay and that fixed it. Good tip, ETCG. Your knowledge is pretty freakin extensive to know these little intricacies.
Thanks a bunch Eric! Because of this, I could help fix my neighbors 2003 Odyssey. It was stalling after 45min of driving. Van would start back up after a 5 min rest. the main relay was just like you showed, one solder point was bady corroded, and another was cracked.
@hs100 Everybody says that about my soldering in this video but honestly I've not had a problem with them coming back. Thanks for your input and for your comment.
@cohwitin Don't replace the fuel pump in a Honda without testing if it is getting power and ground would be the first suggestion, they really don't go bad all that often. Perhaps you might benefit from the video I did on diagnosing a no start. Start with that and let me know what you find.
I was really scared when my car rescuer informed me the relay unit is gone without extracting it from under the steering side dash. He had done the hard work of exposing the relay units that turned the car into a scrap heap in the interior. I found out about the petrol relay number from the main dealer, your video and boy presto. Thank you very much please keep up the good work. God Bless YOU.
@EricTheCarGuy You hit the nail on the head with this comment. It's why diagnosis is so much more important than just learning how to swap out parts. Strangely, youtube authors often get stuff backward, failing to emphasize diagnostics. And SO MANY people here swap out parts before thinking. Gotta admire the two diagnostic winners on the 'net, realfixesrealfast and EricTheCarGuy.
Thank you for posting this helpful video! It fixed my intermittent starting problem that had been going on for years. Always started eventually but had been getting increasingly worse. Solder joints looked ok but several were slightly discolored so I redid those. Boom! Can’t thank you enough.
I am facing this problem for a year now. Even the experts couldn't diagnose the problem. One day I just knocked the relay box and the check light went out. I managed like this for a few months but now even the knocking won't work. I have to keep one if the relay tilted to get the engine running. I'll try soldering tomorrow. Hope it works and not fuck up things more hahshshshshssh
Thanks Eric the car dude! This is exceedingly helpful. I noticed that my 92 Civic doesn't start on hot days. This has left me stranded a few times and in need of lifts home. Then I would return to my car when the weather cools down in order to take the car back home. I had no idea this could have been solved so quickly and cheaply. Your video will help me sound knowledgeable when I take it to the mechanic, so he'll deal straight instead of trying to rip me off.
@dseries16 Thanks for the comment. This is why I always say to gather evidence before you replace parts because as you stated you don't always get accurate information.
Thanks for this video, the Honda starts like a champ now and saved me $50 that's what I was for to repair and they said was going to take 2 days, took me 20 minutes and I used the spare cash to buy a nice air filter... Awesome video.
Thank you Eric, your quick tip saved my 1991 Prelude from a no return trip to the wreckers. The main relay was a bit hard to locate RH drive Australia model but resoldered the circuit board and fixed the no start problem.
Thanks for video it explains my current situation. Unfortunately my '92 Civic is in the shop as I write this. Had a problem for 7-8 weeks intermittently (start/stall, stall when driving but restart okay). Spent too much money at one garage where they couldn't pinpoint a problem and it continued. Finally went to dealership and they are fixing it but costly. As a female without mechanical background I appreciate your thorough explanation with examples.
Thanks for this video, just did it about 2 hours ago, i tested the pump jumping terminals 5-7 and it was working, got the relay checked and fixed like the video and that's it! Its been like 2 years with this hot day's starting problem, hope this lasts forever. Anyway, thanks ETCG more videos on ACCORD 90-93 would be great!
@1daniray I'm very happy to have saved you from buying a fuel pump, Honda fuel pumps hardly ever go bad and the aftermarket replacements aren't nearly as good. Thanks for the comment.
Hi Eric. Many many thanks for posting this video ! My 1998 UK Honda Civic 1.5 v-tec 5 door had the same issue with the fuel pump not kicking in. Took the relay out and it was exactly as you described it to be. The exact same pin/ solder joint had gone on the relay board too ! Soldered it and popped it back in and now the car runs great again ! It's guys like you who take time out of there day to post cool vids like this that save guys like me time and a lot of money ! Keep up the good work ! Sm1
Thank you so much for your video. You explained very well every steps, how things work and how to fix it. I almost gave up on my Honda Odyssey 2002. The car stopped suddenly intermittently and won’t start again for 30 minutes or hours. My auto mechanic can’t diagnose it. After watching your video, I pulled out the main relay, inspected the board careful and noticed one solder joint with hairline crack. I followed your instructions and fixed the solder joint. Now I realized that the issue happened when the weather is very hot.
Eric the car genius, thank you for saving me from buying a new relay, new fuel pump, and/or following the wires looking for a short. Just a simple cracked solder joint repair. Thank you thank you thank you
I have a 1991 Honda Accord that would occasionally refuse to start. On these occasions the S light on the dashboard would be flashing. You'd have to wait 5 or 10 minutes for the S light to stop flashing and then it would start. It was intermittent, so you never knew when you'd end up getting stranded in some parking lot somewhere. I was extremely skeptical that this would work, but I was willing to try anything. I'll be damned if this didn't do the trick! I did it about a month ago and ever since then I've had absolutely no issues with the car starting, so I'm calling it fixed. Thank you a 1000 times over! I really didn't think it would work.
@icemangixxer The main relay is located under the dash on the drivers side normally, just make sure you don't have fuel pressure when your trying to start it, if you have fuel pressure the main relay is not the problem.
15 years old. Still helps. If you get "stuck" somewhere , on cars where the main relay is near the brake pedal you could push the brake down a few inches and slide your foot off of the pedal and let it "bump" upward. Because it is mounted very close to the pedal, sometimes the "thump" will jolt the relay and it may work for a few minutes. (yes, the voice of experience speaking). Don't do it to hard or you could break the button where the switch lands. Just an emergency procedure to get you back home. (you could try tapping it with a tool if you are in a location where you can do that safely).
@kandiceconley As I suggested in the last comment I don't feel your problem has anything to do with the main relay if your engine won't even crank, I suggest you watch the video that I suggested about diagnosing a starter problem and go from there.
Great idea pulling the guts out of the relay vs. trying to remove the entire relay. I swapped the new guts into the old body. It made a 2-hours job into a 10 minute one.
Hey Eric, just a side note that would make this even simpler. Somebody mentioned it in a very "this is how you do it way", but if you just dab a little flux on there you could just as easily "re-sweat" it as we elec tech's call it. It would just flow into the joint with minimal additional solder and look pretty too :). The little dab of flux will also creates much faster heat transfer and cleans the solder joint at the same time. Just my .02.
@freakzilla154l Help me to help you by giving me some information. First, what is the car doing? Is it a crank no start or a no start no crank? Next, what is missing, spark, fuel, or engine mechanical when it is not starting if it does crank?
I have to mention some soldering tips though... use an iron that has a cleaned/wetted tip (use of a sponge or brass tip cleaner help a lot) and whenever heating up a solder joint make sure the tip touches the copper pcb side AND the through-hole pin so that it is all heated evenly and quickly. I have done these relays a couple of ways - simply reheating/add a tiny bit to existing solder vs desoldering/new solder. I typically just do the reheat/tiny bit more solder now, works great!
Thanks dude!!! This was exactly my problem. I sort of missed up. I took your advice and solider the funky looking spot on the board. I didn't put the circuit board inners back into the holder. It cranked right up and I tried to put it back into the housing while it was running and it must of shorted the whole board out. So I went to buy another one, started right up. This type of simple problem would be paradise to a dishonest mechanic.
I little different symptom, which is my 91 honda accord will never start the first time, and it will start right up the second time, I took the main relay and re soldered it the problem solved. Thanks Mr Eric
@EricTheCarGuy np. I've learned a lot from your videos, so I'm glad I could contribute something. One thing to add regarding the relay soldering: I decided to do all the solder joints, not just the cracked ones (I had a few cracks forming), to prevent future issues. To remove the solder, the iron should be nice and hot then it should dialed down when applying new solder (adjustable temp iron is best).
@snake009 I did videos on checking fuel pressure and on checking and diagnosing a no spark. Check those out to see if they help. If you still have a problem let me know and I will see if I can help.
Thank you! I have a feeling that is my problem. I've done a lot of soldering. I think it's generally safer to get the iron hot first, because some electrical components are heat sensitive, so you want to heat them for as short a time as possible. ironically, a hotter iron is probably better because it heats very quickly allowing you to get in and out fast. Those cheap pencil irons are often just barely hot enough, so I try to be patient and let them get good and hot before attempting to solder anything.
This happened to my wife's 1998 V6 Accord EX. But it would shut down while running at freeway speed! It would restart after cooling down some and then down the road would repeat. Never had a problem with a no start, just an engine shut down while running on the road. Pulled the main relay and re-soldered it and it is good as new! Pennies worth of solder versus $44.00 from Honda.
Every time I have a problem and search it on RUclips its always Eric the car to the rescue. I tell you Eric is the most valuable RUclipsr in my opinion.
THANK YOU Eric the car guy for making all these wonderful helpful videos still providing assistance to people many years after you upload them.
Just wanted to send out a HUGE THANK YOU ERIC!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! My Legend died a couple of years ago, so she has been parked in the garage under the car cover (she is my Sunday driver). Had a ot of medical issues, so she had just not been on the priority list. Decided it was time to figure out what was going on with her. Watched your video and voila! She started and we went and stretched her legs a little last night and going for a longer stretch today! Now to get her tags renewed and we are GOLDEN!!! You saved me a fortune and got my baby back to me!!! Thanks so much!!!!
Glad she back on her feet 🤣
THANK YOU SO MUCH!!! I just walked to Auto zone to buy a fuel pump and trying to see how to install on RUclips found this video. Not only did I save $100 bucks I fixed my ride. Hell ya..
My '88 CRX w/ 225,000 miles refused to start at work, I came home and watched your video, had a friend drive me back, p/u the relay, did the repairs as on your vid, took the relay back, and boom, car started first time. A Big Thank you for posting this vid, it saved me a towing fee ! Thanks again !
14 years ago and still helping out today on 2024...
Yo same ima try this and see if my b20v come back to life
So four years of trying to figure out why my 95 Honda Accord would always start cold but fail to restart after a short stop (like at the gas station) any time the temperature got >75 degrees. Popped out the relay and one solder joint was definitely bad while 3 more were questionable. Cleaned up and resoldered all 4 joints and now IT IS FIXED!!! Thank you so much!
*****
which relay did you pop out? I have the same problem....did your s light (d4) flash when you tried to 'hot' start? mine does...
Kelly Myers when the starter goes it does the same thing. I mean if you still have your Honda, they're hard to kill :D
D4 Ignition Switch can cause that .. mine did freaked me out .. when it lit up D4 going down the highway. The Car quit when I was in rush hour at a traffic light and you know horns blasting and people screaming and me trying to get the thing off the road - tranny stuck in gear and I forgot all about the key press to get it out of gear to push the thing..
I had this frustrating problem for several years. An Australian mechanic suggested the same fix - solder the contacts on the circuit board. Took less than ten minutes and solved the problem ... 6 years and counting! Thanks for sharing.
I just want to say thank you very much. After a few hundred dollars attempting to fix a random shut offs and no starts, I came across this video and bam fixed. Pulled the relay out and the same pin was cracked all the way around it. Re soldered and no more issues. I'm sure the part companies hate you but you sir are a modern hero
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU!!! This saved me $50 bucks since I didn't have to buy the new Relay!! 2000 Honda Odyssey was intermittently not starting, so I looked online and this was the first thing that came up. I re soldered the relay and boom!! BACK IN ACTION!! Thanks Eric!!
I wish I was this fortunte ):
So your Odyssey did start at times? I would think with a bad solder joint it would never start? I've got an odyssey that isn't always starting when I need it to.
jpetersen92020 up
My odyssey main relay decided to fail while driving to Alaska from New Jersey; We opened it, and sure enough, found the bad solder joint. Thank you Eric for getting us all the way to the Arctic Ocean and back!
Hope this is read as constructive criticism and not hating cause I really like Eric's vids and want to help him and all of you when soldering. When you solder, make sure the soldering iron is at full temp first, clean the tip of the iron thoroughly, then pre-tin it a bit so it shines. Hold tip of iron against the clad board and against the wire at the same time, hit with some solder till it surrounds the whole area, remove tip of iron, and walla, you will have a very solid, clean and professional solder joint that should not have any issues for many years. Balling it up might work for a while, but it won't last long. Thanks for the video Eric, you've helped me in the past and I hope this will help you in return.
I'd go for the "drench it in flux" technique.
dumass00072 A little extra flux can help sometimes, but it's more about technique assuming you are using good solder to start with.
Hope I am not coming off sound like a jerk cause I really don't mean to.
HostileHST Not at all. I totally agree with you. .
HostileHST I like your careful approach. I too wanted to share this info, but probably would have made some people upset.
Hey thanks for the video I have been workin on my friends car for the past few days and this video really helped.
He had told me that he had replaced the main relay so I had just skipped over it a few time since he "just replaced" it. come to find out he had been swappin out the starter relay and i found that out after askin him to show me what he had done so far.
Oh the joys of working with people
You need to hold the soldering iron tip to the lead and the pad on the circuit board, heat it for a few seconds, apply FLUX CORED solder, should look like a hershey's kiss when done.
One month ago I repaired the relay on my 2000 Accord. It went out again yesterday. I removed the relay and found a half dozen cracked (cold) solder joints. I removed and reflowed the solder on all the solder joints. It works like a champ. Thanks again Eric!
PERFECT!
had a intimitant starting issues for years, yesterday the car flat out refused to start. found this video and some help on the del sol forum and less than 10 minites my car is working again.
awesome!
Hey Eric, I don't know if you still check the comments on such an old video, but I just wanted to say thank you for this video!
A friend needed help diagnosing a no start issue and I was chasing relays and fuses for hours and was almost certain the fuel pump was dead. It didn't sit easy with me since they are usually reliable so I sat down and did some research on what else to check. Your video popped up and it was EXACTLY what was needed. Was able to reflow the solder on the relays and BAM car came right back to life and saved my friend a hefty mechanics bill.
Thanks for all your videos! You've taught me so much and gotten me out of many tight spots!
RIP Eric
I really wish I saw this video. Ended up going to the mechanic and paying $200+ to fix this exact issue for my 1998 honda civic. Great videos!!
What the hell did they fix then that cost $200 ?!?!
vazdef He probably wont reply but mechanics usually charge $100 an hour, 1 hour min. plus parts.
Eric, wonderful video! So grateful you showed the second kind of main relay at the end of the video as that was the kind I had on my 1991 Honda Accord. With a magnifying glass I was able to find the circumscribed crack on the solder joint you pointed out. More than 10 years after you posted the video it is still being a blessing to backyard mechanics. WIshing God's blessings back at ya! Thanks again!
The lead free solder used in electronics today doesn't work as well as the older tin/lead solder. The tin/lead solder can still be found where you can buy stained glass supplies, but I'm not sure if it has flux built in. You may need to buy that separately. Anyway, don't attempt to solder until the iron has reached maximum temperature or you get a joint like we saw in the video. You not only want the part hot, you also want the circuit board pad hot so the solder will bond tightly to it. It will actually wick to it. You'll know it when it happens. Waiting for the iron to get hot also minimizes the heat that goes into the surrounding circuit board or into the part because the job gets done quickly. It also helps to prevent the foil on the board from lifting. After soldering, you should also clean off the excess flux. Flux is acidic and over time, if it remains on the board, it can eat away at the circuit board foil. This is especially true for very thin foil traces. It can actually eat them in two. The key to a good solder joint is practice. Soldering is a skill that gets better with practice. Thanks for all the great videos. Keep up the good work.
Greetings from the UK Eric, thanks very much for taking the time and effort to show this problem on the Honda Civic I striped down the relay and found exactly what you have shown.
If people only knew how much time and effort it takes to put a video on RUclips to help others there would never be any criticism, so thanks very much for sharing this information as you have saved me and many others hundreds of pounds, if I see you in my local pub I'll buy you a beer !!!! Thanks.
Great video, thanks!! Found 3 cracked solder joints on mine, which was causing hard/no start when hot. A little re-soldering and she was fixed!
@x360ps3fan Ignition switches have been a problem on Honda's for years, in fact I do hope to make a video on one but I haven't had one come in in some time. Thanks for your input and comment.
Dude worked like a charm... took me 10 minutes to fix, 5 of it watching this video... mucho gracias
Dude man your a life saver, My car hasn't started for a month and after I saw this video and checked my main relay and wiggled it a bit it started right up. I had cracks in the Main Relay that prevented spark to my car. Keep up the good work man and thanks again for this video.
my 2001 odessy was acting crazy , stopping in traffic , would turn over but not start for about 10 minutes then it woulod start and run like new , sometimes for an hour or a week or several months then do it again , This fixed the problem. I re soldered all of the joints on the board. I tried to use a small pen iron like in the vid but it just didnt get things hot enough so I used an old 100 watt gun and it did the trick
Same issue. Whenever I stopped to fill up with gas, always had difficulty starting the ol ZC. I took my good ol misuba, gave it the solder treatment, that was 10 years ago, and it's still going strong. Cost -- $15 for soldering iron. Love your work Eric. Stay dirty man.
Just fixed my 99 Accord with this same issue. Thanks Eric! However, I strongly recommend re flowing all solder joints and adding solder as needed. A solder joint can be bad/weak even though it may visually appear good/strong. Since it takes mere seconds to re flow a single joint, you might as well do them all. Be careful not too let the joint heat up for too long or you can damage the resistors on the back side.
@TrickyNekro Your most welcome, sorry I just get a bit worn out sometimes but your right it could have been a better job especially if I replaced the tip on my soldering gun, it's been overdue for some time. Thanks again for your comments I really appreciate it.
@Dillonj177 Unless it has an aftermarket fuel pump already in it it's probably not the fuel pump if it's not starting because of a lack of fuel pressure. Honda fuel pumps hardly ever go bad.
Just want to say thank you Eric. Took your advice, removed the main relay and I had 3 areas that needed resoldered, and that's what I did. Hopefully takes care of it.
@MrGLENWOOD2 It sounds like you may have more than one issue. Start with any check engine lights you might have, if you don't have any look to the general things like tune up items and vacuum leaks. Good luck.
Hi Eric I have a 2013 Honda Civic SI and out of the blue it quit an I towed it home an it turns over perfect but don't start. Changed the fuel pump cause I didn't hear it come on an the new one which is good don't come on. I used starting fluid an it starts. Check all the fuses an some of the relays. Does a 2013 Civic have a main relay? Also I changed the 2 big battery fuses, which were fine. If you can help that would be so awesome I have been walking to work an just got K pro an want to drive her. Thank you in advance.
@Ericthecarguy also when I goto hook up flash pro to find out the check engine light it says it can't communicate. Tried a couple times, an yes my cig lighter/acc fuse is good. If you can solve this with those specs your a boss! An my fuel pump relay is good too. Checked them with a multimeter. Don't know an can't find if it has a main relay. If you can't help can you at least answer that? Thank you Eric I'll light them up for ya an tell her who fixed her! Haha
I had just bought a 93 del sol from my friend about two weeks ago and after about 20 min running i shut off the car and wouldnt start again. long story short, i watched this video, resoldered the joints and voila!!! started right up... no problems since. Thanks again!!!!
@SuperDeluxe80 I realize I should have done a better job of soldering however I haven't had one come back yet. Thanks for your input.
@TheInitialForce I won't reedit the video but it sounds like that would make for a great NEW video. Thanks for your suggestion.
@rlenzen2 That is one of my favorite things, saving you cash. Thanks for the comment.
My Accord now starts like a charm!! After following the tutorial by @EricTheCarGuy everything just works perfect.
Thanks a lot man!!!
This issue has been troubling me since I got the car 8 years ago. I changed almost everything on the ignition system and every time I was amazed that the problem wasn't fixed. Now it starts with absolutely no problem!
i replaced my cap/rotor/coil/plugs/wires/fuel filter and 3 rotted out grounds before finding the brilliance to pull the relay and conduct this free repair
well at least spark and fuel will continue to be delivered haha
was stalling intermittently and sometimes no start after engine was warmed
Wait till the ignition switch goes.. :-) just dont forget about that gear shift unlock to put into neutral - so you can push it out of traffic..
@TroyBoy4201 Be sure to check for fuel pressure before you condemn the main relay, the no start could have another cause as well. Thanks for the comment and good luck.
I'll have to try this one this evening... my trusty Accord did not get me to my workplace this morning
Le Mecano Du Dimanche lol, I was cursing my 94 civ for exactly that but forgive me car you've been so very trusty up until now,
Bro, many thanks to you for taking the time and making this video, my mechanic took my gas tank down and replaced the fuel pump and the car still didn't start(97 Acura TL), i came on youtude desprate and came across this video, i took the relay off and followed your directions and now the car is candy, If you ever come to Nassau Bahamas, i work at the Atlantis Resort i will treat you to a free dinner to any of our 5 star restaurants, just email on youtube.
You have great video's but that solder joint is terrible. Being in electronics prior, you should remove the old solder then resolder. Other than that, great videos.
He is using the wrong technique to solder - that is why it is terrible. Sure he could clean it - your average DIY'er here probably will not have the tools to do that - I usually heat and sling it when I don't have my sucker or any braid.
Man, Loved this. been wrestling with my relay for a cpl months trying to cool it on hot days because I didnt want to spend the cash, but its been dead for two days now. 10 minutes after watching the video I had my relay repaired and back in and the car started right up! Thank you for saving me cash!
@TheWyatt007 Next time just pull the 'guts' out instead of trying to unbolt it.
Thanks Eric! My uncle's car died at my house ('98 Accord), and I don't no nothing bout fixin no cars ...but I can solder. I had that main relay out, soldered and fixed in 10 minutes flat after watching this and looked like The Man! True, YOU are the man, but I gladly took the credit. :)
Eric your not very good at soldering. Note that your soldering should have volcanic shape when done. Ball shape mean it doest adhere to the surface.
It is EricTheCarGuy and not the SolderGuy. His technique was correct, in that he applied the heat to the item needing soldering and the heat transfered to the solder causing it to flow, and not the to the solder of the joint directly, which creates as better bond and reduces the likely hood of a cold joint. He could have just heated the joint and let re-flow. The blob shape would not create problems here as it did not cross any other circuit path, it would just look neater and uniform if he had used less solder.
***** The correct way to solder properly is; to first heat the solder gun tip well, then touching the soldering joint with it in order to heat that properly, (it helps if putting just a little bit of new solder on that tip before hand, but not to solder with it but to be able to transfer heat to the solder joint faster..) and once the solder joint is finally hot enough, only then you touch the solder-joint with the soldering wire. NOT the soldering IRON, but Always the soldering-joint directly. This is due to the soldering paste which is in the soldering wire already, and it comes out once it's melted....
***** Also the joint to be resoldered was not cleaned properly with contact cleaner, Scotchbrite or fibreglass brush and a blast of high pressure air.
Soldering is hard, I think anyways, I suck at it, but i'm a comp. engineer :)
Electronics Technician here. I did board-level, through hole electronics repairs for many years in the 90's. The secret to good soldering is to heat the base of the circuit board with a hot iron, apply a little bit of solder, then move the soldering iron up the wire.
A good solder connection will appear shiny. A dull or solder connection that appears to form a ball is called a cold solder connection and will eventually fail. Use some soldering wick to remove the solder and try again. Make sure you do not overheat the circuit board too much or you will lift the copper trace off the circuit board.
if you was right here where i live i'd buy you a drink you literally just fixed my car i couldn't get it to start for nothing took the relay off opened it didn't see any visible cracks but seeing how i work on electronics i reflowed all the solder joints and added fresh solder put it back in my car and she started right back up thanks you just got a subscriber
Just wanted to let you know that this solved my problem on my 01 accord f22. Really stumped me for a while because I had just changed the oil pump seal and timing belt so naturally I was looking at timing. Came across your video's and looked at my main relay. I have the second mitsushiba model you showed and found 2 solder points that were cracked. Thanks a ton for doing what you do man!
@oscarswallow It may not be this relay however as it could also be the electrical portion of the ignition switch that could also cause that symptom. This only works if the car does not have fuel pressure. Thanks for the comment and good luck.
You, as always were spot on and I was able to repair the bad solder utilizing the millions of American Tax dollars training from the US Navy on how to solder!!! Thanks again sir, you are the best!
Good job dude. Nobody had a video on taking out the fuel pressure relay that's under the dashboard, but you did mention how to pry it open and just leaving the housing in with the bracket. I will only add this to the viewers is that in order to take out the connector plug you need to press on the plastic lock clip in order to release the wire connection.
I had my accord with a local mechanic for no start for 3 days and they changed "Ignitor" and "Reprogrammed" the key but they could not make it start. Bill was pilling over 300 already and still no start. So, I checked this video and went to the mechanic and told him to check main fuel relay...which I force them to do, then you know what...exactly!!!! - bad main fuel relay it is. Now I have doubt that they charge me for things that I really didn't need. Thanks Eric, you are such a help.
Thanks for the tip, we just went ahead and bought one for my son's 95 Accord. It was only about 50.00 and fixed the problem right away. It took about 10 min to replace. Thanks again!
i have a 91 civic si and my car was not starting. when i turned the key to power on i wouldent wear the fuel pump and when i tried to start the car it would just crank but not turn over. i had no clue what was going on. so i seen this video and i did everything eric said, now my car starts fine. im so happy with the results. i soldered every joint on the main realy and it realy worked, thanks much eric!
Very hard to see without u showing exactly what to look for. Thanks Eric I remember when you only had a few thousand subs😊 congrats sir
@punkofdeath Glad I could help and that you liked the video. Thanks for your comment.
I used to have a 1988 Prelude that had this exact issue as described. Very hot interior and the car wouldn't start. Cool interior, and it would start. It was super bizarre and through reading I found out this was the culprit. I resoldered the joints in the main relay and that fixed it.
Good tip, ETCG. Your knowledge is pretty freakin extensive to know these little intricacies.
Thanks a bunch Eric!
Because of this, I could help fix my neighbors 2003 Odyssey. It was stalling after 45min of driving. Van would start back up after a 5 min rest.
the main relay was just like you showed, one solder point was bady corroded, and another was cracked.
@hs100 Everybody says that about my soldering in this video but honestly I've not had a problem with them coming back. Thanks for your input and for your comment.
@cohwitin Don't replace the fuel pump in a Honda without testing if it is getting power and ground would be the first suggestion, they really don't go bad all that often. Perhaps you might benefit from the video I did on diagnosing a no start. Start with that and let me know what you find.
I was really scared when my car rescuer informed me the relay unit is gone without extracting it from under the steering side dash. He had done the hard work of exposing the relay units that turned the car into a scrap heap in the interior. I found out about the petrol relay number from the main dealer, your video and boy presto. Thank you very much please keep up the good work. God Bless YOU.
@EricTheCarGuy You hit the nail on the head with this comment. It's why diagnosis is so much more important than just learning how to swap out parts. Strangely, youtube authors often get stuff backward, failing to emphasize diagnostics. And SO MANY people here swap out parts before thinking. Gotta admire the two diagnostic winners on the 'net, realfixesrealfast and EricTheCarGuy.
This was exactly the problem with my '04 Ody. Just fixed it myself for no money with only a soldering iron. Thank you!
Thank you for posting this helpful video! It fixed my intermittent starting problem that had been going on for years. Always started eventually but had been getting increasingly worse. Solder joints looked ok but several were slightly discolored so I redid those. Boom! Can’t thank you enough.
I am facing this problem for a year now. Even the experts couldn't diagnose the problem. One day I just knocked the relay box and the check light went out. I managed like this for a few months but now even the knocking won't work. I have to keep one if the relay tilted to get the engine running. I'll try soldering tomorrow. Hope it works and not fuck up things more hahshshshshssh
Thanks Eric the car dude! This is exceedingly helpful. I noticed that my 92 Civic doesn't start on hot days. This has left me stranded a few times and in need of lifts home. Then I would return to my car when the weather cools down in order to take the car back home. I had no idea this could have been solved so quickly and cheaply. Your video will help me sound knowledgeable when I take it to the mechanic, so he'll deal straight instead of trying to rip me off.
@dseries16 Thanks for the comment. This is why I always say to gather evidence before you replace parts because as you stated you don't always get accurate information.
Thanks for this video, the Honda starts like a champ now and saved me $50 that's what I was for to repair and they said was going to take 2 days, took me 20 minutes and I used the spare cash to buy a nice air filter... Awesome video.
Thank you Eric, your quick tip saved my 1991 Prelude from a no return trip to the wreckers. The main relay was a bit hard to locate RH drive Australia model but resoldered the circuit board and fixed the no start problem.
I was having a rouugh two weeks without a car. me being broke, and your help made my car work. so thank you. much appreciated
Thanks for video it explains my current situation. Unfortunately my '92 Civic is in the shop as I write this. Had a problem for 7-8 weeks intermittently (start/stall, stall when driving but restart okay). Spent too much money at one garage where they couldn't pinpoint a problem and it continued. Finally went to dealership and they are fixing it but costly. As a female without mechanical background I appreciate your thorough explanation with examples.
I repaired a brake control module on my 02 Tahoe with this method. Thanks Eric! Saved me $1000.00
Thanks for this video, just did it about 2 hours ago, i tested the pump jumping terminals 5-7 and it was working, got the relay checked and fixed like the video and that's it! Its been like 2 years with this hot day's starting problem, hope this lasts forever.
Anyway, thanks ETCG more videos on ACCORD 90-93 would be great!
@1daniray I'm very happy to have saved you from buying a fuel pump, Honda fuel pumps hardly ever go bad and the aftermarket replacements aren't nearly as good. Thanks for the comment.
Hi Eric. Many many thanks for posting this video ! My 1998 UK Honda Civic 1.5 v-tec 5 door had the same issue with the fuel pump not kicking in. Took the relay out and it was exactly as you described it to be. The exact same pin/ solder joint had gone on the relay board too ! Soldered it and popped it back in and now the car runs great again ! It's guys like you who take time out of there day to post cool vids like this that save guys like me time and a lot of money ! Keep up the good work ! Sm1
Thank you so much for your video. You explained very well every steps, how things work and how to fix it. I almost gave up on my Honda Odyssey
2002. The car stopped suddenly intermittently and won’t start again for 30 minutes or hours. My auto mechanic can’t diagnose it. After watching your video, I pulled out the main relay, inspected the board careful and noticed one solder joint with hairline crack. I followed your instructions and fixed the solder joint. Now I realized that the issue happened when the weather is very hot.
So far so good. No intermittent stopping or startup issue after the fix.
@grullonbb You're most welcome. Thanks for the comment.
Eric the car genius, thank you for saving me from buying a new relay, new fuel pump, and/or following the wires looking for a short. Just a simple cracked solder joint repair. Thank you thank you thank you
My 99 prelude will live to drive another day!
Hey Eric I just wanted to take the time to tell you that you're the man! Thanks for everything.
I have a 1991 Honda Accord that would occasionally refuse to start. On these occasions the S light on the dashboard would be flashing. You'd have to wait 5 or 10 minutes for the S light to stop flashing and then it would start. It was intermittent, so you never knew when you'd end up getting stranded in some parking lot somewhere. I was extremely skeptical that this would work, but I was willing to try anything. I'll be damned if this didn't do the trick! I did it about a month ago and ever since then I've had absolutely no issues with the car starting, so I'm calling it fixed. Thank you a 1000 times over! I really didn't think it would work.
@icemangixxer The main relay is located under the dash on the drivers side normally, just make sure you don't have fuel pressure when your trying to start it, if you have fuel pressure the main relay is not the problem.
@salpta Yea they are up in there. Well done and thanks for the comment.
15 years old. Still helps. If you get "stuck" somewhere , on cars where the main relay is near the brake pedal you could push the brake down a few inches and slide your foot off of the pedal and let it "bump" upward. Because it is mounted very close to the pedal, sometimes the "thump" will jolt the relay and it may work for a few minutes. (yes, the voice of experience speaking). Don't do it to hard or you could break the button where the switch lands. Just an emergency procedure to get you back home. (you could try tapping it with a tool if you are in a location where you can do that safely).
@kandiceconley As I suggested in the last comment I don't feel your problem has anything to do with the main relay if your engine won't even crank, I suggest you watch the video that I suggested about diagnosing a starter problem and go from there.
@caamalrandy Glad you liked it, thanks for the comment.
Great idea pulling the guts out of the relay vs. trying to remove the entire relay.
I swapped the new guts into the old body. It made a 2-hours job into a 10 minute one.
@z4muli12 Awesome, helping people in other countries is the coolest thing ever. Thanks for the comment.
Hey Eric, just a side note that would make this even simpler. Somebody mentioned it in a very "this is how you do it way", but if you just dab a little flux on there you could just as easily "re-sweat" it as we elec tech's call it. It would just flow into the joint with minimal additional solder and look pretty too :). The little dab of flux will also creates much faster heat transfer and cleans the solder joint at the same time. Just my .02.
@freakzilla154l Help me to help you by giving me some information. First, what is the car doing? Is it a crank no start or a no start no crank? Next, what is missing, spark, fuel, or engine mechanical when it is not starting if it does crank?
Thanks Eric! It was an easy $10 quick fix. I found 2 cracked solder joints. Resoldered them and started with no problem
I have to mention some soldering tips though... use an iron that has a cleaned/wetted tip (use of a sponge or brass tip cleaner help a lot) and whenever heating up a solder joint make sure the tip touches the copper pcb side AND the through-hole pin so that it is all heated evenly and quickly.
I have done these relays a couple of ways - simply reheating/add a tiny bit to existing solder vs desoldering/new solder. I typically just do the reheat/tiny bit more solder now, works great!
Thanks dude!!! This was exactly my problem. I sort of missed up. I took your advice and solider the funky looking spot on the board. I didn't put the circuit board inners back into the holder. It cranked right up and I tried to put it back into the housing while it was running and it must of shorted the whole board out. So I went to buy another one, started right up. This type of simple problem would be paradise to a dishonest mechanic.
I little different symptom, which is my 91 honda accord will never start the first time, and it will start right up the second time,
I took the main relay and re soldered it the problem solved. Thanks Mr Eric
@EricTheCarGuy np. I've learned a lot from your videos, so I'm glad I could contribute something. One thing to add regarding the relay soldering: I decided to do all the solder joints, not just the cracked ones (I had a few cracks forming), to prevent future issues. To remove the solder, the iron should be nice and hot then it should dialed down when applying new solder (adjustable temp iron is best).
@KidInWhiteKlouds I'm happy to help, thanks for your comment.
@snake009 I did videos on checking fuel pressure and on checking and diagnosing a no spark. Check those out to see if they help. If you still have a problem let me know and I will see if I can help.
@wjsj69 Your absolutely right, in fact I'm just going to replace it. Thanks for the comment.
Thank you! I have a feeling that is my problem.
I've done a lot of soldering. I think it's generally safer to get the iron hot first, because some electrical components are heat sensitive, so you want to heat them for as short a time as possible. ironically, a hotter iron is probably better because it heats very quickly allowing you to get in and out fast. Those cheap pencil irons are often just barely hot enough, so I try to be patient and let them get good and hot before attempting to solder anything.
its a dying art... i did it for a living back n th 80s... keep ur tip tinned was the motto....
GOD BLESS U, SON!!! U JUST FIXED MY 89 HONDA CIVIC HATCHBACK ENGINE STALL & MAIN RELAY NIGHTMARE!!!! THANK U SO MUCH!!! =)
This happened to my wife's 1998 V6 Accord EX. But it would shut down while running at freeway speed! It would restart after cooling down some and then down the road would repeat. Never had a problem with a no start, just an engine shut down while running on the road. Pulled the main relay and re-soldered it and it is good as new! Pennies worth of solder versus $44.00 from Honda.
@Jimiec Thanks for watching and the great comment.