TRQ ignition coils will have your engine running like new. TRQ ignition coils are manufactured to precise specifications using premium raw materials to optimize each vehicle's ignition system. To ensure peak performance, TRQ recommends replacing ignition coils in sets to prevent electrical output imbalances. All products are fit and road-tested in our Massachusetts R&D facility to ensure we deliver on our promise of Trusted Reliable Quality.
Product Features
High dielectric epoxy and reinforced bobbins for extended service life
Rubber, Silicone, or Phenolic Resin Shell: Prevents premature boot wear
Application Specific Design: No modifications required
Item Condition:New
Attention California Customers:
WARNING: This product can expose you to chemicals including Lead and Lead Compounds, which are known to the State of California to cause cancer, and birth defects or other reproductive harm. For more information, go to www.P65Warnings.ca.gov.
Lifetime Warranty
This item is backed by our limited lifetime warranty. In the event that this item should fail due to manufacturing defects during intended use, we will replace the part free of charge. This warranty covers the cost of the part only.
Returns: Parts with electrical components cannot be returned once installed.
FREE Shipping is standard on Orders shipped to the lower 48 States (Contiguous United States). Standard shipping charges apply to Hawaii, Alaska and US Territories. Shipping is not available to Canada.
Expedited is available on checkout to the United States, excluding Alaska, Hawaii and US Territories as well as P.O. Boxes and APO/FPO/DPO addresses. Final shipping costs are available at checkout.
How to Replace Ignition Coil 2002-08 Nissan Maxima
How to Replace Ignition Coils 2002-06 2-5L Nissan Altima
Created on:
Tools used
Socket Extensions
T30 Driver
10mm Wrench
10mm Socket
Slip-Joint Pliers
Ratchet
1. Removing the Front Ignition Coils
Remove the four T30 Torx bolts from the engine cover
Remove the 10mm bolt from the ignition coil
Disconnect the ignition coil wiring lead
Pull out the ignition coil by hand
2. Installing the New Front Ignition Coils
Push the new coil into place
Connect the ignition coil wiring lead
Insert the 10mm bolt into the ignition coil
Repeat Steps 1 and 2 for the other two front ignition coils
3. Accessing the Rear Ignition Coils
Use a flat blade screwdriver to loosen the intake hose clamp screw
Disconnect the green wiring connector
Loosen the clamp on the middle intake line with the slip joint pliers
Disconnect the hose
Remove the two 10mm bolts from the front intake plenum brackets
Remove the two 12mm bolts from the rear intake plenum bracket
Loosen the clamp on the back vacuum line with the slip joint pliers
Remove the two 12mm nuts and three 12mm bolts from the front of the intake plenum
Disconnect the blue wiring harness
Pry the wires out of its clip with a flat blade screwdriver
Disconnect the wiring harnesses behind the plenum
Pry the wires out of its clip with a flat blade screwdriver
Pull the plenum up and out of the way
4. Replacing the Rear Ignition Coils
Replace these coils using the steps outlined in Steps 1 and 2
5. Reinstalling the Intake Plenum
Make sure nothing gets caught underneath the intake plenum
Push the plenum into place
Reconnect the intake hose
Start the two 12mm nuts and three 12mm bolts into the plenum by hand
Insert the two 12mm bolts into the rear plenum bracket
Tighten the two 12mm nuts and the three 12mm bolts to between 25-30 foot-pounds of torque
Reconnect the rear wiring harness
Insert the 10mm bolts into the front plenum brackets
Connect the wiring harnesses on the side of the plenum
Connect the vacuum hoses
Check that there are no loose connections
Put the engine cover back on
Insert the four T30 Torx screws into the engine cover
Brought to you by 1AAuto.com, your source for quality replacement parts and the best service on the Internet.
Hi, I'm Mike from 1A Auto. I hope this how-to video helps you out, and next time you need parts for your vehicle, think of 1AAuto.com. Thanks.
In this video we're going to show you how to replace the ignition coils on this 2003 Nissan Maxima. We go through the simple part of replacing the coil in the first part of the video. The front three coils are very easy to replace. All you need to replace them is a T30 torx driver and a 10mm socket with a ratchet or 10mm wrench. Then we detail how to take the upper intake plenum off, which allows you to get to the rear three coils. This requires a few more tools: pliers, and a 12mm socket and ratchet in addition to your 10mm.
Start with the T30 torx driver and remove the four bolts that hold the top engine cover. OK, so the coils on this side of the engine are really easy to see. With a 10mm socket, remove the bolt and here's a connector here. They have a tab on the top. Push the top tab with that finger. Disconnect. Finish taking this bolt out. Then the coils come right out. The new coil from 1A Auto is just like the original. It's going to go right in there. Just the same. Put it down in. Just push it straight down, reconnect the lead, bolt back in. Then you can see the two in the front here are just as easy as that one.
You may be saying "Well, how about the rear ones?" The rear ones are pretty easy but you do have to take this intake plenum off. I'm going to show you that real quick. We're going to start up top here. With a flat blade screwdriver, loosen up the clamp that holds the intake hose on. Make sure that's nice and loose. Make sure you can pull this off the intake and then we're going to disconnect this green connector here. Just push on the little tab that's on the front here and take that off. Then we're going to disconnect this middle line here. Pull that clamp off and then use my pliers. Grab onto the hose, make sure the hose twists a little bit. Pull that off. Take a 10mm socket. We're going to take off this bolt here. Let that bracket go to the side. We're going to take off this bolt here. Put these up here. It allows that to come off. Now we're going to use a 12mm socket. I can't really show them to you because they're back in here but if you just take your hand and reach back in here, you'll feel two bolts and they're going in this way. You need to remove those two bolts. That's a bracket holding up the back of the plenum.
As I'm looking back here I can see that there's another vacuum line. I'm just going to use my pliers. There's a clamp, squeeze the clamp, take the clamp off using pliers. Get the hose to twist, pull it off. Then take my extension, and there are two 12 mm nuts on each end. Then there are three 12mm bolts to remove. Disconnect this lead. Take the screwdriver and pry out the clip that holds the harness. Just take the screwdriver and again pry clip off that holds the harness. You should be able to push on the two teeth beside. So right here on the backside you can see I disconnected this here. There's also two connectors, little tabs. Disconnect them then squeeze this clip as well and disconnect this line. Pull these two vacuum lines up out of their clip, or vice versa. Disconnect that connection. Pull up. Now you can lift it up and push it out of the way enough. I'll show you here. You can lift it up and out of the way enough that you can now get to the coils. You may want to just have somebody help you out, lift it out of the way for that middle one. That's probably the most difficult one. I'm just going to fast forward as I put the plenum back on. It's pretty much a reversal procedure.
Make sure that there's nothing, no wires or anything between the upper intake plenum and the lower intake before you put it down. Get it down into place. Make sure that you get the intake hose over the opening of the plenum on the driver's side. Make sure you get it down in place. Just check underneath, make sure there's nothing between the plenum and the engine intake. I can see it go down on this side here, down there. Pull the intake tube up. Replace that. Get that intake tube on; it goes down nice and easy. Once it's in place, take and put the two nuts and the three bolts that hold the upper intake to the lower intake. I put those in place then I actually put the two bolts that hold the rear of the intake to the bracket, put those in place and tighten them up. After I've tightened those rear ones up then I tighten the plenum down. You want to tighten it down to about 25 to 30 foot pounds. Then just carefully, I basically just try to go methodically from the passenger side rear. Reconnect those two connections back there, and there are two vacuum lines. Then come around to the front and bolt on the two brackets. Make sure the connections are reconnected. Then around to the throttle body and air intake side. Bolt everything back together. Make sure all the electrical connections are connected and all the vacuum connections are connected.
Basically what I do is after I'm done I just look very carefully around. You basically look for any clean or shiny spot. Basically when you take connectors apart, you'll notice that they're dirty but then when you take them apart, the part that had fit together was nice and clean so it's a good idea to look around. Just look for any clean spots or shiny spots that might indicate that there's something that hasn't been reconnected. Once you have it all reconnected then you can put your intake cover back on.
We hope this helps you out. Brought to you by www.1AAuto.com, your source for quality replacement parts and the best service on the Internet. Please feel free to call us toll-free, 888-844-3393. We're the company that's here for you on the Internet and in person.
Tools used
5mm Hex Wrench
10mm Socket
Ratchet
1. Removing the Engine Cover
Remove the four 5mm Allen bolts from the engine cover
Lift the cover off
2. Removing the Ignition Coils
Push in the clip and disconnect the connector
Remove the 10mm bolt from the ignition coil
Lift the ignition coil up and out
3. Installing the Ignition Coils
Insert the coil into the engine
Tighten the 10mm bolt to the coil
Connect the connector
4. Reinstalling the Engine Cover
Place the cover over the engine
Tighten the four 5mm Allen bolts
Use a 5mm Allen key to remove the plastic engine cover. There are one, two, three, four bolts holding it on. Lift that off and put it aside.
These are your four ignition coils. I'm going to show you how to remove this one, procedure will be exactly the same for the other three. Start by pushing this clip in and wiggle the connector out. Use a 10mm socket and ratchet and use a retaining bolt. Put that bolt aside. Grab it on both sides, and kind of wiggle it, because there is a boot that goes down over the spark plug. It's got a little suction to it. Pull it out and that's how you remove the coil.
Here's our old coil from our vehicle, and our new coil from 1aauto.com. See, they're an exact match. Got the bolt holes on either side, same style connectors, and the same style connector at the spark plug end. This will fit perfectly, and get the car running great again.
Install our new coil packs. Now this bolt hole here is just a metal insert into this plastic valve cover, so we're not going to over-tighten those, just going to tighten them very carefully. So slide the coil down. Push it over the spark plug. It will sit in there. Get the bolt started. I'm just using my wrist to tighten it, and right when I feel it get tight, I'm going to stop, 'cause I don't want to pull this threaded insert out of the plastic valve cover.
Reinstall the connector, and repeat this procedure for the rest of the coils. Reinstall the engine cover, and reinstall your four bolts. These bolts are just going into aluminum, just holding on the plastic cover. Not a lot of torque on these. The job is complete.
Thanks for watching. Visit us at 1AAuto.com for quality auto parts, fast and free shipping, and the best customer service in the industry.
ICA61680
In Stock
Product Reviews
Loading reviews
4.86/ 5.07
7 reviews
5 Stars
4 Stars
3 Stars
2 Stars
1 Star
6
1
0
0
0
C
October 17, 2018
The prices for the 5 cops and a new valve cover for wife's frontier exceptional. Shipping was as advertised thought for spending over hundred bucks thought shipping could be less.
Works as expected
P
December 6, 2018
I needed to replace the coil pack on cylinder 5 of my 2001 Nissan Maxima. So far so good, no more rough idling. My only gripe is that shipping took a little while to Southern California and I had to find alternate arrangements to get around for a few days.
quick fix
J
March 5, 2019
15 minutes and back on the road!
Son's 03 Maxima
Kenneth
March 27, 2021
Son's Car was skipping and giving a P0304 code...After swapping around coils we realized that it was the coil... Ordered one from 1Aauto and it fit perfectly...No More Code or skipping
Kimberly
June 8, 2023
Fits perfectly
Paul
November 10, 2023
Works great
Excellent replacement parts.
Stephen
October 6, 2024
Excellent replacement parts.
Customer Q&A
No questions have been asked about this item.
Customer service
877-844-3393
Monday - Friday 8:00am - 9:30pm ET Saturday - Sunday 8:00am - 4:30pm ET
Suzuki is a registered trademark of Suzuki Motor Corporation. 1A Auto is not affiliated with or sponsored by Suzuki or Suzuki Motor Corporation.See all trademarks.
Enter Vehicle Year Make Model
Specify your vehicle's year, make and model to guarantee fit.
Year
Make
Model
Options
Drivetrain
This part doesn’t fit a . Select from parts that fit.