Can you keep driving?
Can you keep driving?
Stop driving if any of these apply
- !The engine starts running much worse, stalls, or the warning light flashes.
- !The vehicle begins to lose power sharply or misfire badly while the code is active.
What to check first
Step-by-step checks
- 1
Safety first
Work with the engine off and cool enough to avoid burns from hot ignition and exhaust parts
- 2
Free - no tools
Inspect the crank and cam sensor connectors, harnesses, and nearby wiring for looseness or damage
- 3
Basic tool needed
Check whether the engine starts hard, stalls, or loses power at a specific temperature or speed
- 4
Basic tool needed
If the code appeared after repair work, confirm sensor seating, gap, and harness routing first
- 5
Basic tool needed
If scan data is available, compare the timing reference signals before replacing parts
If the code returns
- -If the signal changes with harness movement, wiring deserves a closer look than the sensor alone.
- -If the code returns after a sensor swap, revisit the connector and reference path before buying another part.
- -If the engine still acts up after the electrical checks, mechanical timing or reluctor issues become more important.
Background
What this code means
P0372 is a generic OBD-II cam/crank synchronization or timing reference code.
The ECU is seeing a signal pattern that does not line up with expected engine timing or reference pulses.
A no-start, stall, rough run, or intermittent loss of signal can appear when the ECU cannot trust the timing reference path.
Diagnosis
Common causes
Sensor signal fault
The cam or crank sensor may be dropping out or reading incorrectly.
Connector or wiring issue
A loose, corroded, or heat-damaged connection can interrupt the signal.
Mechanical timing issue
A slipped belt or chain can move the signal out of sync.
Reluctor or tone wheel issue
A damaged trigger wheel can make the signal pattern look wrong.
Avoid these mistakes
What not to do
- xDo not replace sensors first if the wiring, connector, or mechanical timing side has not been checked.
- xDo not ignore drivability changes just because the code sounds like a sensor or circuit problem.
Parts
Parts that may need replacing
See also
Related OBD codes
Source notes
Generic OBD-II (SAE J1979 / ISO 15031-5). P0372 was expanded around common low-pulse timing-reference faults, including missing pulses and signal dropouts.
This guide is written as a generic multi-make reference, so bulletin history, sensor locations, and repair order can still change by manufacturer and engine family.
This is generic OBD-II guidance and should not override vehicle-specific service information. Exact diagnosis and repair steps vary by make, engine family, and model year.
Last reviewed: 2026-04-10
Reference: Open reference