When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.
The blue/black/white plugs look like the ignition coil connectors. The middle black w/green seal is not a factory connector. Looks like somebody added something in there.
To my untrained automatic eye, in pic 2 the female half with both male terminals still inside is in your right hand and the male portion should just have bare wires inside that terminals have pulled away from in your left hand, either due to a poor wire crimp or just pulling on it harder than crimps are designed to tolerate which is a pretty common thing with weather proof connectors.
If it's the Sumimoto connector I'm thinking of, left hand holding male connector terminal wires should route to automatic blue X-05 pins circled in yellow in pic below + located in passenger footwell beside your ECU. If it's the connector I'm thinking of there might still be a center plastic locate pin, if not, it's a completely unrelated 3rd party connector as others have already said.
Similar male + female connectors are available from easternbeaver.com.
The male portion is M(6195-0006) DL Sealed Series.
The seller should know the female connector part # if male pins can't be pulled out with pliers.
Connectors include necessary terminals for recrimping and waterproof plugs for connector bases for about $5ea + shipping. TE connectivity have similar connectors but there is a lot of legwork + expense finding related terminals for connectors ... it's not worth the trouble.
You just need to insert the crimped wire + terminal with the notched side facing up into the connector back with smooth side of the connector facing down for terminals to lock in place.
No relation to any names mentioned above.
To my untrained automatic eye, in pic 2 the female half with both male terminals still inside is in your right hand and the male portion should just have bare wires inside that terminals have pulled away from in your left hand, either due to a poor wire crimp or just pulling on it harder than crimps are designed to tolerate which is a pretty common thing with weather proof connectors.
If it's the Sumimoto connector I'm thinking of, left hand holding male connector terminal wires should route to automatic blue X-05 pins circled in yellow in pic below + located in passenger footwell beside your ECU. If it's the connector I'm thinking of there might still be a center plastic locate pin, if not, it's a completely unrelated 3rd party connector as others have already said.
Similar male + female connectors are available from easternbeaver.com.
The male portion is M(6195-0006) DL Sealed Series.
The seller should know the female connector part # if male pins can't be pulled out with pliers.
Connectors include necessary terminals for recrimping and waterproof plugs for connector bases for about $5ea + shipping. TE connectivity have similar connectors but there is a lot of legwork + expense finding related terminals for connectors ... it's not worth the trouble.
You just need to insert the crimped wire + terminal with the notched side facing up into the connector back with smooth side of the connector facing down for terminals to lock in place.
No relation to any names mentioned above.
Hope this helps more than it confuses..
( ;
OK cool good eye there bud! And my car is 5speed so i guess I don't need to worry about any of them only the white one which is for the coils correct?
I'm not sure without being there, to be honest. Spark + fuel are critical of course,
but turbo setup + solenoid simplification options are almost endless for this car.
If you're car is 5 spd, or a 5 spd conversion, your blue X-05 connector next to ECU connectors might be only 10 pin.
I suspect that wiring from connector in both your hands might go to the 2 outer terminals as shown in pic below
if that sealed connector is in fact what I think it is. No idea where the female connector end terminates ... a sensor on the engine.