He back-probed Pin B13. The ECU wasn't grounding it. He swapped a known-good ECU from his shelf. The pump roared. Dead driver transistor inside the original ECU. Second ghost: a tiny, fried semiconductor.

Marco repaired the IGT wire, swapped the ECU's fuel pump driver, replaced the TPS, and scrubbed the engine ground. Then he plugged everything in, held his breath, and turned the key.

He laid out his multimeter and a coffee-stained printout from a dead forum. Here we go.

Pin D3 (Black/Orange) – . Sensor ground. He touched Pin C10 (sensor positive) and Pin D3 (ground) with his multimeter. The reading jumped like a startled cat. Bad ground.

He pulled the passenger kick panel. There it was: the 16-bit brain, a grey metal box stamped 89661-1A230 . Four plugs: A, B, C, and D. Sixty-two pins of silent judgment.

| Pin | Wire Color | Function | Why It Matters | |------|------------|-----------|------------------| | A7 | Yellow/Red | IGT (Ignition Timing) | No signal = no spark | | B8 | Yellow/Black | VAF Meter signal | Airflow measurement | | B13 | Green/Red | Fuel Pump Relay Control | No ground = no fuel | | C1 | Red/Blue | TPS (Idle contact) | Bad idle, stalling | | C10 | Brown/Yellow | Engine Coolant Temp | Rich/lean running issues | | D1 | White/Red | +B1 (Main power) | ECU dead | | D3 | Black/Orange | Sensor Ground | Random sensor errors |

Pin B13 (Green/Red) was the —Circuit Opening Relay control. When the ECU sees airflow (via the VAF meter, Pin B8, Yellow/Black), it grounds Pin B13, the fuel pump whirs, and the engine drinks.