P0206
Injector Circuit/Open - Cylinder 6
If your code reader dashboard displays the generic DTC error code P0206, your vehicle is currently experiencing an active failure related to "Injector Circuit/Open - Cylinder 6". Proper system troubleshooting is required to safely clear this warning.
Driver's Summary
When your OBD2 scanner shows P0206, the engine control module has flagged an issue specifically related to injector circuit/open - cylinder 6. The most common signs are misfire code accompanied by injector code, poor drivability. This is a serious fault — avoid extended driving and have your vehicle inspected by a mechanic as soon as possible to prevent further damage.
Symptoms
Misfire code accompanied by injector code, poor drivability
Common Causes
- Clogged or electrically dead injector
- Broken wire in harness
- Loose connector
- Blown fuse
How to Fix
- 1 Replace Cylinder 6 injector
- 2 Perform continuity test and repair wire
- 3 Ensure plug clicks into place
- 4 Replace fuse
Technical Explanation
P0206 is stored after the control module confirms the fault over multiple ignition cycles, ruling out transient electrical noise as the cause. For injector-specific codes, the ECM monitors the injector control circuit voltage drop during each pulse; a shorted or open injector presents a characteristic resistance signature that differs measurably from a healthy unit. After two failed drive cycles, the code transitions from a pending to a confirmed DTC, and the PCM activates the MIL. Clearing the code without repairing the fault will result in re-illumination within one to two complete drive cycles.
Is It Safe to Drive?
Driving with an active P0206 fault risks accelerating damage to clogged or electrically dead injector and related components. The longer the fault persists, the more expensive the eventual repair becomes — what starts as a sensor or solenoid issue can escalate to major mechanical failure.
Mechanic's Pro Tip
When diagnosing P0206, always test fuel volume delivery in addition to static pressure — a pump that holds pressure at idle but delivers insufficient volume under load will cause the fault only during acceleration or high demand, making it difficult to replicate in the driveway. Use a fuel pressure gauge with a volume outlet port: a healthy pump should deliver at least 1 liter per minute. Replace the fuel filter first; it's the cheapest test and solves the fault in a significant percentage of cases.
Injector replacement: $200 - $450