Hope this post may help someone else figure things out a little quicker than it took me. I went out to start my 2000 LC one morning and it cranked strong but wouldn't ever try to fire. After finding no codes with my OBD II scanner and checking all the items mentioned in other threads, the only clue I had was no spark. Figuring it was some unusual electrical issue, I had it towed to the dealer for diagnosis. They were able to get a malfunction in the crank position sensor circuit P0335 out of their higher end diagnostic equipment. The technician diagnosed it as a pinched wiring harness (behind the coolant tube on the front of the motor) and quoted $2,030 for a complete new engine wiring harness. I had replaced the TB and WP about a 6 weeks prior and thought the diagnosis was plausible, but figured I could fix a pinched wiring harness instead of a complete replacement. After having it towed back to the house, I disconnected the crank position sensor and oil pressure sensor and to my amazement the harness slid out with no pinching visible. After removing the protective cover from the harness and finding no damaged wires in the harness I was puzzled. After some head scratching I finally checked the resistance on the crank position sensor and got no reading. I replaced the crank position sensor with an AutoZone one for $100 and bingo that was the culprit. I have not heard of a crank position sensor going out on a LC, but it happen to me and it can be challenging to diagnose when there is no code for it being output for a typical OBD-II scanner to pick up. The dealership service manager was a stand up guy and admitted his technician had blown the diagnosis and completely refunded their diagnostic and tear down fees. I was just out the towing, crank position sensor and had to buy a new battery, which was mysteriously dead when it came back. Not sure what caused the crank position sensor to go out in the first place, but theorize it could have been related either to some coolant dripping on it from a leaking water pump that was recently replaced or some water ingress from crossing some flooded streets about two weeks prior. It is very easy to access and remove the crank position sensor from the bottom front of the motor with the skid plate removed.