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A crankshaft sensor can show piston speed and top-dead-centre events, but on a four-stroke engine the crank reaches similar positions on compression and exhaust strokes. The camshaft turns once for every two crank revolutions, so its signal identifies the engine phase.
With phase known, the ECU can time injection for each cylinder, assign ignition and misfire events, and control cam phasers. If the signal disappears, some engines start using a substitute strategy after extra cranking; others will not start or disable variable timing.
| Technology | Signal behaviour | Testing consideration |
|---|---|---|
| Hall effect | Digital switching signal using supply, ground and output. | Check pull-up behaviour and switching under load. |
| Magnetoresistive | Digital output with sensitive magnetic target detection. | May resemble Hall wiring but use different electronics. |
| Inductive | Alternating voltage generated as a metal target passes. | Amplitude changes with speed and air gap. |
| Integrated lead sensor | Sensor and short harness form one part. | Lead length, clips and heat protection must match. |
| Smart/digital sensor | Encoded information or current-modulated signal. | A scope and correct technical data are essential. |
The sensor reads a wheel, vane, peg or machined feature attached to the camshaft or phaser. Unequal windows create a recognisable pattern so the ECU knows which cylinder and cam position it is seeing. The waveform must be assessed over a full engine cycle.
A bent vane, loose reluctor or excessive camshaft end float can produce a clean electrical signal at the wrong time. Metallic debris may distort a magnetic sensor's response. Mechanical inspection is therefore part of electrical diagnosis.
The ECU compares the cam edge positions with a reference pattern from the crankshaft sensor. A correlation fault means the relationship is outside its expected window; it does not name the failed component. Mechanical timing, phaser position, oil control and both sensor circuits influence the result.
Dual-variable-timing engines may report commanded angle, actual angle and adaptation values for each camshaft. A fixed offset suggests base timing or target alignment, while a slow or unstable response can point toward oil supply, solenoid, phaser or signal integrity.
| Identification point | Possible variation | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Engine code | Signal pattern and mounting depth. | Model and capacity are insufficient. |
| Bank | Bank 1 or Bank 2 on multi-bank engines. | Locations and lead routing can differ. |
| Cam function | Intake or exhaust. | Similar bodies may have different calibration or plugs. |
| Build date | Revised sensor, target or harness. | Observe production breaks and supersessions. |
| Connector | Pin count, keying and latch. | A plug match does not confirm terminal function. |
| Mounting depth | Flange-to-tip distance and O-ring position. | Controls air gap and sealing. |
| Lead arrangement | Integral cable, clips and heat sleeve. | Prevents rubbing and exhaust heat damage. |
| Reference update | Sensor supplied with spacer or revised seal. | Use the approved parts together. |
| Symptom | Possible explanation | Useful evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Long crank before starting | ECU waits to infer phase without a valid cam signal. | Scope signal during the first crank revolutions. |
| No-start | No signal, implausible correlation or wider power fault. | Check engine speed, synchronisation status and supplies. |
| Intermittent hot stall | Heat-sensitive sensor or connection. | Capture waveform and temperature when fault occurs. |
| VVT performance code | Signal, oil, solenoid, phaser or mechanical timing issue. | Compare requested and actual cam angles. |
| Misfire assignment fault | Incorrect phase information. | Check cam/crank relationship and engine mechanics. |
| Oil leak at sensor | Hardened O-ring, damaged bore or excessive crankcase pressure. | Inspect seal and ventilation system. |
| Reduced power | ECU disables variable timing or adopts a default strategy. | Read codes and live operating mode. |
Stalling, unreliable starting or severe misfire can be unsafe and may damage the catalyst. Avoid unnecessary driving until the cause is established. Do not repeatedly clear a timing code while mechanical damage progresses.
Circuit high, circuit low and no-signal codes suggest electrical investigation. Range/performance and correlation codes require a broader check. Freeze-frame engine speed, temperature, load, oil temperature and commanded cam position help reproduce the condition.
A code naming “Sensor A” or “Bank 1” must be decoded using the correct engine layout. Bank 1 contains cylinder number one, but its physical side varies. “A” commonly refers to intake, yet service data remains authoritative.
Use the exact wiring diagram before probing. A three-wire Hall sensor commonly has supply, ground and signal, but supply may be five volts or another controlled voltage and terminal order varies. Measure supply under load and check ground voltage drop, not just continuity with power off.
Back-probe with terminals designed not to spread the connector. A scope shows switching amplitude, edge quality, dropouts and noise. Some signals rely on an ECU pull-up, so an unplugged voltage does not prove the sensor circuit is healthy.
Record cam and crank signals at the same time through several revolutions. Compare a known reference for the exact engine and software state. One edge viewed alone cannot establish timing because phasers move and patterns repeat.
If the pattern shifts with commanded VVT, compare the amount and speed of movement. If an edge disappears only at high temperature or during harness movement, inspect sensor electronics and connector grip. Keep oscilloscope grounds and leads away from rotating belts and ignition interference.
A worn chain, weak tensioner, jumped belt or incorrectly installed timing drive changes genuine cam position. Low or wrong engine oil can delay hydraulic phasers. Sludge can restrict control passages, and a sticking oil-control solenoid can hold the cam away from its commanded angle.
Before replacing a correlation sensor, verify oil level and approval, inspect relevant screens and follow mechanical timing checks. A new sensor cannot correct a loose target wheel or phaser locked at the wrong stop.
Many sensors seal directly into an oil-filled cylinder head. Oil on the outer connector may result from a failed O-ring, while oil inside the terminal cavity may travel through a damaged sensor or harness. Clean and repair with materials safe for seals and connectors.
The sensor flange must sit flat. Old O-rings, sealant, debris or a cracked mounting ear can change the air gap. Do not add washers or file the tip to alter clearance unless an explicit service procedure requires a calibrated shim.
Cam sensors have no scheduled cleaning interval. Keep the correct engine oil and change interval because variable-timing operation and chain life depend on it. Repair leaks that contaminate connectors, and retain harness clips after cylinder-head or timing work.
Following a timing-belt, chain or cylinder-head repair, correlation faults should trigger a recheck of mechanical datums and installation procedure before electronic parts are blamed.
A camshaft-sensor fault can illuminate the malfunction indicator lamp, cause misfire and increase emissions. An emissions-related engine warning displayed on an applicable vehicle can lead to an MOT failure, as can emissions outside the prescribed limits.
An MOT pass does not validate waveform correlation across all loads. Correct the underlying electrical, oil-control or mechanical fault and confirm reliable starting before returning the vehicle to service.
Q: What does a camshaft sensor do?
A: It identifies engine phase and cam position for injection, ignition and variable timing control.
Q: Can a bad cam sensor stop the engine starting?
A: Yes on some systems; others start slowly using a substitute strategy.
Q: Does a correlation code prove the sensor is faulty?
A: No. Mechanical timing, phasers, oil control and the crank signal must be checked.
Q: What do Bank 1 and Bank 2 mean?
A: Bank 1 contains cylinder one; use engine data to identify its physical side.
Q: What are Sensor A and Sensor B?
A: They often identify intake and exhaust positions, but verify the exact application.
Q: Can low engine oil cause a cam-sensor code?
A: It can disrupt variable timing and create phase plausibility faults.
Q: Can I test a cam sensor with a multimeter?
A: Basic supplies can be checked, but a scope usually gives stronger signal evidence.
Q: Why does the fault happen only when hot?
A: Sensor electronics, terminals or wiring can fail as temperature changes.
Q: Does a new sensor need programming?
A: Usually not, though some engines require a relearn or adaptation procedure.
Q: Can metal debris affect the sensor?
A: Yes, magnetic debris can distort some sensors and may indicate internal wear.
Q: Is oil around the sensor normal?
A: The tip may operate in oil, but external leakage or oil-filled terminals need repair.
Q: Can I drive with a cam-sensor fault?
A: Limit driving; stalling, no-start, misfire or timing faults require prompt diagnosis.
Q: Can a cam-sensor fault fail the MOT?
A: It can through the engine warning lamp, misfire or excessive emissions.