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P1300 — Ignitor Circuit

Detailed page for trouble code P1300.

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Code

P1300

GMC P — Powertrain

Ignitor Circuit

Brand: GMC
Views: UK: 33 EN: 69 RU: 42
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Page language: EN

Causes

  • Open or shorted wiring in ignitor/ignition module primary circuit
  • Loose, corroded, or damaged connector at ignitor or coil
  • Failed ignitor (ignition module) or ignition coil
  • Poor power (battery/ignition feed) or ground to ignitor
  • Faulty crankshaft or camshaft position sensor (missing trigger)
  • PCM/ECM driver circuit failure or internal fault

Symptoms

  • Check Engine light (MIL) on
  • Engine misfire, rough idle, or hesitation
  • Hard start or no-start condition
  • Intermittent loss of spark on one or more cylinders
  • Possible reduced power or stalling

What to check

  • Read freeze frame and live data with a scan tool; note related codes (misfire, coil codes, cam/crank sensor codes)
  • Visually inspect ignitor, coils, connectors, wiring harness for damage or corrosion
  • Verify battery voltage at ignition feed circuit with key on/crank
  • Check ground continuity to ignitor mounting/connector
  • Backprobe ignitor primary trigger and power leads while cranking; measure presence of trigger pulses
  • Inspect crankshaft/camshaft position sensor signals if triggers are missing

Signal parameters

  • Ignitor primary feed: battery voltage (approx. B+ with key ON/CRANK)
  • Ignitor ground/driver: pulsed switching to ground from PCM/ignitor when cranking (frequency proportional to engine speed)
  • Trigger input: cam/crank position sensor pulse present at ignitor/PCM when cranking
  • Typical fault condition: no trigger pulses, intermittent pulses, or shorted/low voltage on feed/ground

Diagnostic algorithm

  1. Retrieve codes and freeze frame data. Note other stored codes (P03xx, P035x, P06xx, cam/crank sensor codes). Clear codes and attempt to reproduce.
  2. Perform a visual inspection of the ignitor, ignition coils, connectors, and wiring for heat damage, corrosion, or broken wires. Repair any obvious damage.
  3. Check battery voltage at the ignitor power terminal with key ON and while cranking. Voltage should be near battery voltage. Repair supply if low or intermittent.
  4. Check ground continuity from ignitor ground terminal to chassis negative. Clean and tighten ground connections as needed.
  5. Backprobe the ignitor trigger/driver circuit with a lab scope or DVOM (frequency/voltage) while cranking. Confirm trigger pulses are present and within expected characteristics. If pulses are absent, trace back to crank/cam sensors and PCM.
  6. Measure primary coil/ignitor input and output per service manual (resistance where applicable). Replace coil/ignitor if out of specification or intermittent.
  7. If wiring, supply, and ground are good but the ignitor does not respond, substitute a known-good ignitor or ignition coil assembly (if available) to verify operation before replacing PCM.
  8. If ECM/PCM driver suspected after verifying wiring and components, consult vehicle-specific procedures for PCM diagnosis/repair. Avoid replacing the PCM without full verification.
  9. Safety note: ignition circuits can produce high voltage. Take appropriate precautions and follow manufacturer service manual procedures.

Likely causes

  • Damaged wiring or poor connector at the ignitor
  • Failed ignitor/ignition module
  • Loss of battery feed or ground to ignitor
  • Ignition coil failure affecting ignitor operation
  • Faulty PCM driver (less common)

Fault status

⚠️ Status
Ignitor circuit malfunction detected — possible ignition module, wiring, power/ground, or PCM driver issue.
🟡 Repair difficulty: Medium
⏱️ Diagnostic time: 1.0 - 3.0 hours
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