2005 Hyundai Accent has trouble starting after the engine is warmed up

60

Asked by ShibaSpeak Apr 03, 2014 at 12:50 AM about the 2005 Hyundai Accent GLS 2-Door Hatchback FWD

Question type: Maintenance & Repair

Just like the title says if I drive the car 10-15 minutes or more than attempt to restart
while the engine is still warm/hot it has trouble turning over. It will usually crank a little
bit then just stop and not turn over. After letting the engine cool for 30 minutes to an
hour the car starts 100% fine with no hesitation. Car has 108k miles, a new battery and
the check engine light has not come on.

Thank you in advance for any help

29 Answers

63,195

Try letting the engine idle for a minute or two before you shut it off. It's possible that the battery is weak and needs to charge up a little. It's worth a shot.

4 people found this helpful.
103,825

Replace the Ambient Air Temp Sensor. Try Rockauto or ebay for a replacement. Should run under $50.

4 people found this helpful.
60

Would a new battery still be having that issue? I got the factory recommended battery when I replaced it around 6 months ago. Reelin thank you for the Ambient Air Temp Sensor recommendation, that was something I had not though of.

60

I read about a similar problem on another forum. They recommended checking the alternator under full load as well as checking the ground wire both where it connects to the battery and the transmission. Going to try getting both checked for free at Autozone today.

5 people found this helpful.
103,825

If the battery was the issue, it would still start the same after letting it sit a while. Sounds more like you are having a starter issue. I just skimmed your headline before and missed the "will crank a little and then nothing" part. If you have a 6 month old battery and are having a starting problem, I would suggest a new starter. Sounds like when it's hot it's intermittent, but when cool, it starts no problem.

2 people found this helpful.
60

Going to order the starter tonight I think. As I don't have Jacks or a ramp I have been unable to check the battery wire connections at the starter itself. Could it be as simple as them being corroded and not making a good connection on that end? Trying to put the car up for sale so again I'd like to fix for as little as possible

1 people found this helpful.
103,825

That is a possibility, but I have never seen the starter wires so corroded at the starter that it wouldn't turn over. I live in Vt. which is the salt capital of the universe. But anything is possible......

63,195

A hot engine is harder to turn over on the starter and battery then a cold engine.

3 people found this helpful.
103,825

Really? Ever tried to star a car at -30F? Then start the car at +35F. Which one starts easier?

2 people found this helpful.
63,195

Where the hell do you live? That's extreme. A hot engine has had all of its internal parts expand. This causes them to expand. These more friction.

3 people found this helpful.
103,825

I live in Vermont. I will tell you for free that a warm car will start way faster than a cold car. I have auto start. If it's below zero the car will not fire. If it's above zero, say 30 degrees, the car will start no problem. But, if I go out to the car and start it with the key, it will fire right up because I can crank the engine forever. Temperature makes a difference no doubt.

2 people found this helpful.
63,195

You must live up near St. J. I lived over in Bethlehem N.H. way back when. I retired to the Philippines to get away from all of that. Anyway try using synthetic oil. (You can try the Walnut brand if you want to save some money.) That is what I used in my Mercedes ML320. The engine turned over a lot easier when its that cold.

1 people found this helpful.
40

I am having the same problem with my 2004 Hyundai Accent. Have you solved the problem.

4 people found this helpful.
30

I'm having the same exact problem with my hundai.its a 05 has anyone got any good results. I've tried 3 mechanics and they can't find the issue cause the car doesn't give code and no check engine light.

3 people found this helpful.
103,825

Erickhundai05, what have these mechanics replaced so far? Have they replaced your starter?

1 people found this helpful.
30

No not yet but they have taken it apart and looked for codes and . One of them changed the spark plugs and said that was the problem but it didn't fix the problem. One mechanic just gave up and said he wasn't even gonna charge me the fee for checking it.

103,825

I have had an intermittent starter before. I have also had a bad distributor also. I actually have a 95 camry that I had to hot wire with a push button because of the same issue. It would start one minute, and not the next. I also had to hot wire my 89 Toyota 4x4 also. There's a little black piece of plastic at the base of your distributor. That goes bad and the car won't start half of the time. I can't remember what it's called to save my life, but that was causing my issues. Instead of replacing my distributor, I just hot wired my ignition straight to the battery. Not saying that this is the problem 100%, but it was the issue that I had. It was doing the same thing. Running for a while, then when I shut it down, it would not start again until I let it sit for awhile. Here's a quick summary of what I am talking about: The pickup coil inside the distributor can fail and cause a no-start condition. There have also been some failures of the radio noise suppressors inside the distributor which can short out. It is recommended to replace the whole distributor with a complete genuine Toyota distributor if any of its components fail. This is from a Toyota blog, but your car may be having the same issue. A new distributor for your car will run you about $130 on Ebay. There are Youtube videos that show you how to install a new distributor. Not too hard. Good luck!

60

I am having a problem with hot starts also. I know for a fact that it is an ignition problem. Just now started investigating it. You may want to do so also. When I try to start my 2004 Accent when the engine is FULLY warmed up, only a minute or two after shutting it off, one of the coils fires too early, while a piston is still on the compression stroke. It actually tries to blast the piston back down the cylinder, attempting to spin the crankshaft backwards, and thus spin the starter backwards also. After that happened a bunch of times, it finally burned out the starter motor. Got a brand new starter. Ignition issue won't produce or store a code, so I may have to replace every stinking ignition component in the car!! Just to be sure I've actually fixed it. It is, after all, very intermittent.

2 people found this helpful.
20

I have a 2005 accent and am experiencing the same problem. My mechanic replaced the starter, I replace the battery, I have checked out the alternator, cleaned the battery posts new spark plugs and wires. no engine lights. I have been trying to resolve the issue for 9 mos. An additional note the car has less issues as the winter gets colder I live near Chicago. If anyone has resolved the issue i would like to know. To my knowledge this is electronic egnition and no distributor cap.

2 people found this helpful.
20

IAC... if hard starting when cold, LIGHTLY press the gas pedal (accelerator) then turn the key. If the car fires right up when hot with the gas pedal pushed, your IAC is MOST LIKELY the culprit. I am having a similar issue on my '98 Accent and am waiting for the ($200) part to come in today.

2 people found this helpful.
60

Back in October 2015, my starter motor burned out, due to the persistent ignition problem. So now have a reman starter that is better than the original was, new plugs, wires, coil pack, cam position sensor, and crank position sensor. Car starts very reliably now. New problem, vacuum leak where intake manifold interfaces the head, at cylinder #1. These 1.6L engines are noted for intake manifold leaks. I smeared some very good quality High Temp Silicone RTV all around the mating surfaces (didn't want to remove the manifold and replace the gasket). It worked. No more leak. The symptoms of the vacuum leak were VERY BAD MISSING after a hot restart, and CEL. Usually ran fine from a cold start to fully warmed up. But after engine was shut off when fully warmed up, everything must have warped worse while sitting hot not running. Then upon restart, it was sucking LOTS of air, until everything stabilized, and leak subsided. Another symptom was that the idle speed would drift a little. Idle speed was always a rock solid 750rpm. But during the months the leak was occurring undiagnosed, it would drift very gradually from 750 to 1000, and anywhere in between, barely noticeable. Just in case this might help others with an illusive problem.

4 people found this helpful.
20

I had the exact same problem & replacing the Throttle Position Sensor fixed it. Replacement of the Throttle Position Sensor may be another possible solution.

1 people found this helpful.
60

I have a 2011 accent that wont start after running for a few miles once it is up to temperature it has to sit for an hour before it starts again. It gets no fuel or spark then once it is cold starts and runs no codes nothing

6 people found this helpful.
40

Hi there, I would like to add to this thread, as it was helpful to me in solving this problem. I had 5 failures with my Hyundai Accent over a two week period. Most of the failures occurred when it was hotter (over 80 degrees.) It was a completely intermittent problem. The car would start fine for 5 times, and not on the 6th. Here is what happened: Incident #1 Drove it 5 minutes, went inside a store, came out a few minutes later. Wouldn't start - crank but no turnover. Called AAA for a jump. It started. AAA and AutoZone said it was not the battery. Incident #2 Died/lost all power/all the lights came on while driving on the freeway. Waited a few minutes by the side, restarted it, kept on going. Incident #3 Drove it 3 minutes, stopped off at a store to run an errand, would not restart when I came out. Crank but no turnover. Waited 15 minutes. Tried again. Restarted. Incident #4 Same day, about 45 minutes later. Had driven the car for around 2 minutes when it lost all power/motor died/all the lights came on. Would not restart. Had it towed to a shop - more on that in a sec. Incident #5 Got car back from the first mechanic. Had driven car around 3 minutes when it lost all power/motor died/all the lights came on. A stranger stopped and offered me a jump. We tried jumping it 9 or 10 times. Cranked but would not turn over. Tried again 2 hours later. Would not restart. Waited an hour for the tow truck driver. Started right away for tow truck driver. Had it towed to my house anyway. Back at the house, tow truck driver could not get it to start again. Crank but no turnover. As I said, after incident #4 I had it towed to a shop. The mechanic tested the following: Battery Alternator Starter Ignition wiring The mechanic said my car was not throwing any codes. The mechanic acted like I was crazy and was making the problem up. After reading this thread, I asked him to replace the crank sensor. He did not do it. He replaced the cam sensor because it "was easier to get to." He continued to act like I was crazy and said "there is nothing wrong with your car." He even said that "maybe I just didn't know how to drive it." Hello, I have been driving that car for 12 years!! I got my car back from him and vowed never to use that mechanic again. The next day I had incident #5. I had it towed to a different shop. This shop put it in one of the bays and let it run. 45 minutes later, the new mechanic noticed the motor had stopped running. He plugged in his computer sensor and it had thrown a code for the crank sensor. Crank sensor was replaced. I just got the car back yesterday and I am driving it around. I'll update again if I have any problems, but I assume it was resolved.

4 people found this helpful.
20

Crankshaft position sensor. That worked for me too. My symptoms were a little different. After the car warmed up, it wouldn't restart after letting it sit for 20 minutes or so. I would have to wait sometimes almost 2 hours before it would start, after the engine cooled down.

1 people found this helpful.

Hi guys. A few days ago I did replace most of little parts inside engine (Hunday accent 1.4, 2008) before hand mechanic told me you were going to have a problem with starter after we were going to put engine back on the car. I asked him why ? He said we had this issue with every car last few years and we don’t know why. All we can suggest you replace starter and put bigger engine starter like hunday Elantras starter . I didn’t do that because it is orginal starter on my car. I had a exactly same problem like a gentlemen had above. When car is cold everything is perfect car starts very good but after driving around I tried start car ones again it didnt start , I waited 2-3 mins and car started normal. I had no idea at all why is it happens. Car never had problem with starter at all until mechanic touched the car and warned me in advance!

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