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Coil-on-Plug: The Death of Spark Plug Wires

  • Steven Fett
  • Uncategorized
  • February 23, 2026

Ignition coil - coil-on-plug technology

—

If you’ve ever chased a misfire on an older car, you know the drill: check the spark plug wires. Cracked insulation? Corroded terminals? Wire too close to a hot exhaust manifold? Those rubber-coated high-voltage cables were a constant source of problems.

Modern cars have mostly eliminated them. The technology is called Coil-on-Plug (COP), and it’s been standard on most vehicles for over a decade. But as Corny noted when he shared this from a Toyota forum: “Testing failures will involve magic.”

He’s not wrong.

—

What Changed

Old system (distributor + wires):

  • One ignition coil generates high voltage
  • Distributor routes spark to each cylinder in sequence
  • Long spark plug wires carry 20,000-40,000 volts to each plug
  • Lots of moving parts, lots of things to wear out

Coil-on-Plug system:

  • Each spark plug gets its own dedicated coil
  • Coil sits directly on top of the plug (no wire)
  • Computer controls timing for each cylinder individually
  • No distributor, no high-voltage wires running across the engine

DENSO developed the first compact “stick-type” coil that fits right into the spark plug bore. Now most automakers use some version of this design.

—

Why It’s Better

1. No spark plug wires to fail

Those wires were trouble. They cracked, they arced, they picked up interference, they melted when they touched hot stuff. Eliminating them removes a major failure point.

2. Higher voltage, more consistent spark

With the coil right on top of the plug, there’s almost no voltage loss. Each cylinder gets maximum spark energy every time.

3. Individual cylinder control

The ECU can adjust timing for each cylinder independently. Better emissions, better fuel economy, better performance.

4. Fewer phantom misfires

Old systems often had misfires from electrical interference or marginal wire connections. COP systems are much cleaner electrically.

—

Why Diagnosing Got Harder

Here’s the catch: when something does go wrong, it’s not as obvious.

Old system diagnosis:

  • Misfire on cylinder 3? Check the wire to cylinder 3. Swap it with another wire. Does the misfire move? Bad wire.
  • Visual inspection often found the problem – cracked insulation, burned terminals, corroded connections.
  • Basic tools: timing light, spark tester, your eyeballs.

COP system diagnosis:

  • Misfire on cylinder 3? Could be:

– Bad coil
– Bad coil driver circuit (inside the coil!)
– Wiring harness issue
– ECU problem
– Or still just a bad spark plug

  • Coils look fine externally even when they’ve failed internally
  • Need a scan tool to read misfire counts and coil data
  • Swapping coils between cylinders to see if the misfire follows is still the best trick

The integrated driver circuit Corny mentioned is key. In old systems, the ignition module was separate – you could test and replace it independently. Now the driver electronics are built into each coil. When they fail, you replace the whole unit.

—

What Fails and Why

Common COP failure modes:

Symptom Likely Cause
Misfire at idle Weak coil, worn plug
Misfire under load Coil breaking down at high demand
Random multiple misfires Wiring harness, connector corrosion
Check engine light + P0300-P0308 Misfire codes – start with plugs, then coils

Heat kills coils. They sit right on top of the engine, baking in engine heat plus generating their own heat from the high-voltage switching. Over time, the internal insulation breaks down.

Oil contamination is another killer. If valve cover gaskets leak, oil pools in the spark plug wells and destroys the coil boots.

—

Testing COP Coils

Corny’s right that “magic” is involved. Here’s the practical approach:

1. Read the codes

A scan tool will tell you which cylinder is misfiring. Start there.

2. Swap test

Move the suspected bad coil to a different cylinder. Clear codes. If the misfire follows the coil, you found your problem. This is still the most reliable diagnostic method.

3. Measure resistance

You can check primary and secondary resistance with a multimeter, but many coils fail in ways that only show up under load. A coil can pass bench tests and still fail at 5,000 RPM.

4. Check the boots

The rubber boot that seals the coil to the spark plug well often cracks or tears. Inspect them – replace if damaged.

5. Look for oil

If there’s oil in the spark plug wells, fix the valve cover gasket leak FIRST, then replace the coils. They’re probably already damaged.

—

The Makerspace Angle

Working on modern cars requires more diagnostic tools than older vehicles, but the fundamentals haven’t changed: electricity, heat, mechanical wear. Understanding why things fail is more valuable than memorizing procedures.

At the makerspace, we’ve got:

  • Multimeters for basic electrical testing
  • OBD-II scan tools for reading codes
  • People who’ve been turning wrenches for decades

If you’re chasing an ignition problem and want a second opinion, come by. Sometimes explaining the problem out loud is enough to solve it.

—

Links

  • DENSO Direct Ignition Coils: https://www.densoautoparts.com/direct-ignition-coils-cop/
  • Toyota forums (where Corny found this) – search for your specific model + “coil pack” or “misfire”

—

Technology marches on. Spark plug wires are mostly gone. Distributors are museum pieces. But engines still need spark, and spark systems still fail. The more you understand about how they work, the less “magic” is involved in fixing them.

Thanks to Corny for the tip.


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