odeek9
Well-Known Member
Yeah, that's the best idea and I was figuring around $100. I just would like to avoid the 80 miles round trip if I can since I don't trust the truck
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Ron, i worked at a dealership, they follow the procedures in the book, and 90% of the time they will find the problem before ever replacing a part. Also, if they replace a part, and it does not fix the problem, they cannot charge you for it. they will have to put your old part back on and eat the labor costs. If you pay for it, its your own fault for not justifying their reasoning for replacing every part.
Well Ron, I am by no means an "old tech" and that is certainly not how I do things.
If the cutting out stopped with the sensor unplugged then there is probably an issue with the sensor, but it may not solve your whole problem. I would continue diag before replacing it.
adsm08 you are an "old tech", age aside, you rely on common sense then add the technology.
"New techs" rely on technology only, common sense seems to be in short supply, I blame the training, "garbage in-garbage out".
They would replace the coil and ICM before checking the firing order, and maybe never would, just tell customer engine needs a rebuild, lol.
Clogged exhaust..........don't even get me started
Electronics made engines more reliable and efficient, mechanics of how the engine works is still the same.
odeek9
I would pull out plugs again.
Clean tip on each then replace
Disconnect coil
Crank engine
Pull out spark plugs and check each for the amount of fuel, looking for a stuck closed injector-dry plug, or stuck open injector-over wet plug.
All spark plugs should be equally wet with fuel.
On the fuel rail there will be the Fuel Pressure regulator(FPR), it has a vacuum hose, pull it off and check it fuel or fuel smell, diaphragm in FPRs can leak this sucks fuel into intake causes lower MPG without fuel "leak".
With engine warmed up and idling, remove vacuum hose from EGR, there should be no vacuum suction on this line at idle, if there is then EGR control is bad.
Now put another vacuum hose on EGR and suck on it, idle should start stumbling, if you hold it long enough engine could die, but make sure EGR valve holds the vacuum, i.e. you don't have to keep sucking on hose.
Check the MAP sensors vacuum line, easy to do and could be the source of the problem.
Disconnect batteries Negative cable for at least 5 minutes to reboot computer, or if you have a scanner reset it, not just clear it, needs a reboot.
....................... Any thoughts on what should be my priorities?
A voltage/ohm meter is under $30 and pretty much every sensor or control can be tested with one of these, all the Volts and OHMs for each sensor or control is listed somewhere for comparing test results.
Vacuum meter is $25, old school but still one of the better tools for general engine condition.
Read here for how-to/results:
http://www.gregsengine.com/using-a-vacuum-gauge.html
O2 sensor is one that can not be tested with volt or ohm meter, well not quite true, it can be tested, the problem is if it is bad then you would get a CEL code that says "O2 is bad", lol, no misunderstanding that.
So if you test it's voltage it would show correct 0.2-0.7voltage range but it is incorrect if engine was running rich, O2 is not IDing correct oxygen content, so it is bad but showing correct voltage.
Comments like some of these are why people don't trust dealerships.. I'm not saying all mechanics do things right, but where I worked, we had diagnostic books (most of the information can be found online now) with flow charts, and they used sensor tests, because you can test them without fancy electronics. A simple digital volt ohm meter will do all the necessary tests. The only sensor you can not test with it is the oxygen sensor. And if you follow flow charts properly, you will find the right answer without ever changing a part.