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P1366 — Ignition coil A, primary/secondary circuit - low

Detailed page for trouble code P1366.

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Code

P1366

MINI P — Powertrain

Ignition coil A, primary/secondary circuit - low

Brand: MINI
Views: UK: 0 EN: 1 RU: 0
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Page language: EN

Causes

  • Faulty ignition coil A (internal short/open or short to ground)
  • Open or shorted wiring between coil A and the engine control module (ECM)
  • Corroded, loose or damaged coil connector or terminal
  • Faulty coil driver in the ECM/ignition control module
  • Low battery or charging system voltage during diagnostics
  • Poor engine ground(s) affecting coil circuit

Symptoms

  • Malfunction Indicator Lamp (MIL) illuminated
  • Misfire on the affected cylinder (rough idle, surging)
  • Reduced engine power and acceleration
  • Poor fuel economy and increased emissions
  • Hard start or extended crank time
  • Occasional backfiring or hesitation under load

What to check

  • Read and record freeze frame and live data (cylinder misfire counters, battery voltage, fuel trims)
  • Scan for related codes (misfire codes P030x, other coil circuit codes P035x)
  • Visually inspect ignition coil A, harness and connector for corrosion, damage, or oil ingress
  • Check battery and charging voltage at idle and cranking (should be ~12–14.5V)
  • Measure coil primary and secondary resistance with manufacturer spec limits
  • Check continuity and for short to ground between coil connector and ECM pin

Signal parameters

  • Typical coil primary resistance (generic): ~0.5–2 Ω (manufacturer values vary)
  • Typical coil secondary resistance (generic): ~5 kΩ–20 kΩ (varies by design)
  • Expected primary supply voltage: near battery voltage (~12–14.5 V) when key on/run
  • Driver pulse: square/controlled pulse from ECM; primary waveform should show consistent dwell and switching edges
  • Fault condition: primary circuit voltage or waveform amplitude significantly lower than expected or missing pulses

Diagnostic algorithm

  1. Safety first: disable ignition and follow vehicle-specific procedures before removing coils. Disconnect battery if required.
  2. Retrieve freeze frame/live data and note battery voltage, misfire counters, and whether code is continuous or intermittent.
  3. Visually inspect coil A and connector for damage, corrosion, oil, or loose pins. Repair connector issues as needed.
  4. Measure battery/charging voltage at rest, at key-on, and during crank — confirm adequate supply voltage.
  5. Measure coil A primary resistance with DMM and compare to manufacturer spec. If out of range, replace the coil.
  6. Check secondary resistance (if serviceable) and inspect for open winding or short to core.
  7. Check continuity between coil A connector pins and the ECM coil driver pin; inspect for shorts to ground or other circuits.
  8. Swap coil A with another cylinder coil (if identical) and clear codes. If code moves to the other cylinder, coil is likely defective. If code remains on A, suspect wiring or ECM.
  9. Use an oscilloscope on the coil primary to verify driver pulses, dwell time and voltage. Look for low amplitude, clipping, missing pulses or excessive resistance.
  10. If wiring and coil check good, test or substitute the ECM/ignition driver (follow manufacturer procedures).
  11. Repair or replace faulty component(s), clear codes and perform a road/test drive to confirm no recurrence.

Likely causes

  • Defective ignition coil A
  • Damaged connector/wiring (pin corrosion, broken conductor, chafed insulation)
  • Poor ground at cylinder head or coil mount
  • ECM coil driver failure
  • Low system voltage (weak battery/charging)

Fault status

⚠️ Status
Ignition coil A, primary/secondary circuit — low voltage/signal detected. MIL on.
🟡 Repair difficulty: Medium
⏱️ Diagnostic time: 1–3 hours

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