I used to work for an auto repair shop that also did towing, and they had a fleet of 6-8 International 4600 with the DT466E. I was the diagnostic tech and the only diesel tech they had, so I got way more experience with these turds than I ever wanted. We had one of the trucks fail to start one day, which was pretty common and usually an injector or HP oil system issue. This time, it wasn’t. The ECM would repeatedly reset when cranking the engine. I was almost ready to put an ECM in it, but given the cost of the magic box and the fact that my employer was the customer, I was double-checking. I’d checked powers and grounds with a test light, even when cranking, and it looked fine, just a little variation in the brightness of the test light that matched the cranking of the engine, which is to be expected. I decided to check the power and ground voltage with a scope while cranking and I’m glad I did. The power supply was dropping below 4V for literally milliseconds while cranking. This was enough for the ECM to lose power and reset, but too fast to show on my test light, especially given the voltage variation when cranking anyway. I followed the power supply wires back to the battery and found that the 40A fuse holder was melted and causing a voltage drop under load. I had checked the power supply with a high amp test light and the light was bright, but the high peak current drawn by the ECM while cranking was causing an issue. I suspect that every time it tried to fire an injector, it caused a supply voltage dip that reset the ECM. For fun, I went and checked 2 of the other tow trucks that were at the shop and what do you know, the 40A fuse holder for the ECMs on those trucks were also starting to melt. The problem seems to be that 40A is too much for the small automotive fuses to handle. I honestly had never seen a 40A fuse in that size (they are usually maxi or PAL fuses, not the smaller size) and I don’t think I’ve seen one since. I cut out the small fuse holder and replaced it with a maxi fuse holder (still 40A) and the truck fired right up. The shop owner decided to do the same for all the trucks in the fleet and all of them had varying degrees of heat damage to that fuse holder. Bad design I guess. I’m not sure that was the problem you were experiencing here, but I saw that same damn 40A fuse when you were messing with the batteries and it reminded me of that. Hope you never have to work on one of these again. They suck.
@servicesmecaniquev.laverdu17262 жыл бұрын
I second that, I ALWAYS check every possible power or ground connection when troubleshooting a heavy duty truck… in the truck industry wiring harness are a fucking nightmare… 95% of service calls are bad terminal
@zoidberg4442 жыл бұрын
God damn it! That would have totally got me. I would have believed my test light and moved on.
@giggiddy2 жыл бұрын
@@zoidberg444 Me too! Man Kevin, That is some fantastic troubleshooting brother. I consider myself pretty good and I would have missed it. And maybe never caught it. I love this comment section..
@johnathansmith90592 жыл бұрын
40 amp fuse? You mean rats nest of fuses and wiring..no wonder the shit melts lol
@henrypinson38322 жыл бұрын
L
@4knanapapa2 жыл бұрын
Retired from a metro detroit municipality and we avoided international like the plague for the very reason your dealing with.
@juanjaimes183611 ай бұрын
What did you guys go with? Just curious
@brandonheckathorn32702 жыл бұрын
Can't believe someone brought you a plow truck when it's not the busiest part of their season and they dont need it back in 12 hours
@12345NoNamesLeft2 жыл бұрын
Spring and summer, they use a plow to loosen all the gravel shoulders and shove them back onto the lawns.
@dcrog6910 ай бұрын
Generally we wait until it's snowing to do this stuff lol.
@peterhall66562 жыл бұрын
Wes, I am a 70 year old applied mathematician who has worked in defence contexts (not in US). I have worked with PhD electrical engineers on various issues (mainly submarines ) and I like the cut of your intellectual jib. At the outset I thought to myself given the obscure algorithms in the ECM (now to be fair I have actually written some incredibly obscure algorithms for which my emplpoyer holds the patents mind you) which are beyond my detailed knowledge for cars but I I did wonder whether it was a sampling issue going on here. Your analysis is not at all fanciful and I really liked the way you abstracted the problem, What people fail to understand about many computer systems is that they are in many cases actually doing sophistcated averaging, A derivative is a species of average: [ f(x+h)-f(x)]/h. I could go on but I won't. You will get me into Kalman filters etc. Suffice it to say that you and Eric O are up there in my scheme of things. Massive respect for your work. I'd let you loose on my car .
@tharakanewan35442 жыл бұрын
Ha ha nerd.. ( no offense intended ) . I always wanted to become a mechatronic engineer but ended up being a mechanic. Because i found out that I'm not very comfortable with maths .
@htownblue112 жыл бұрын
So Wes, you’re telling me an old workhorse can’t get started in the morning without some Cosby sauce, and once it gets rolling he’s a stud all day. I believe the official condition is called being a 48 year old man. Great diag as usual.
@WatchWesWork2 жыл бұрын
Hmm. Story checks out, but this rig is only 20.
@richardcranium58392 жыл бұрын
@@WatchWesWork old enough
@tmscheum2 жыл бұрын
I would argue that one winter in Illinois is like 4-5 elsewhere so that means this 20 year old truck is more like 80+ years old based on salt corrosion. Just sayin’
@jayehmann41232 жыл бұрын
Cursive writing is a lost art, nicely done!
@DanEBoyd2 жыл бұрын
I noticed an F which looked like the one in the Ford logo! Cursive has its place, but most people's cursive is hard to read. I am one of the proponents of getting it out of school curriculums. Those who want to write in cursive can learn it on their own - it can't be that difficult...
@pheffr2 жыл бұрын
"Rust Belt Shaman" would be a great name for a KZbin channel.
@1976Datsun2 жыл бұрын
On early computerized engines, like in the 70's (my screen name), broken solder joints in the computer could often be diagnosed by kicking the computer when problems happened. Maybe your fiddling with those bolts on the computer and back probing the connector caused a temporary fix. Should have drove it after it started at the end to see if it had power. p.s. thanks for showing your notes. I haven't seen cursive writing in decades. Good to see that some people are still using it. It was actually legible, unlike mine if I tried it. Your drawings are good too.
@godfreypoon51482 жыл бұрын
Writing or speaking, I'd be cursing too after that one.
@howlinhog2 жыл бұрын
An electronics nerd friend of mine back in the mid eighties thought it was ridiculous that one of the diagnostic tools for a failing ECM was to tap on it. I might have kicked it if i'd of had a good shot at it LOL. The difference was, what he was working on didn't vibrate down the highway or live in sub zero to over 100 deg temperature swings.
@philtowle46832 жыл бұрын
I have never heard the term cursive writing, however I used to do this but write the letters over the top of each other. Vents the anger without anyone being able to read what you put, usually about them.
@michaelvrooman56812 жыл бұрын
Working on a 76 280Z right now. Grounds seem to be a big issue with that year car.
@toma51532 жыл бұрын
@@philtowle4683 That's a good one Phil. New interpretation to me. I've never heard it used in that way before.
@jeffburdess22372 жыл бұрын
I had a very similar issue on an ambulance. It was a 94 7.3. Ended up just being a leak on the HEUI system not allowing it to build enough pressure to fire the injectors. I’ll tell ya.. that engine in a van style chassis makes it very difficult to get to the problem. I wish this video existed two years ago as I didn’t even know what that system was all about.
@LeewardStudios2 жыл бұрын
Yep been there done that on the ambulance cut away bodies. I learned years ago to check pressures on the oil system or nothing is happening. Same thing on the 6.0 as well. Once they start taking longer to crank you better find the leak. Many times it is a bad IPR
@bluegrallis2 жыл бұрын
Wes worked on my 95 E350 with the 7.3, that used to be an ambulance. I'm sure he would agree, that it's difficult to get to just about anything. My truck was eating up IDM's every 20 miles. Another mechanic put a new one in and it made it back to my house. He said it must have been a bad one, because we checked the connections and harness under the valve covers. While Wes was working on it, he found 4 wires on the firewall, that come from the IDM, that had a spot of insulation missing, all in the same spot. Maybe a mouse got hungry? Anyway, the IDM he put in is still working 2 years later. 😬
@garybrugone4332 жыл бұрын
I did not fall asleep. I am simply amazed at your diagnostic skill set. I have been out of the trade since 07,but I absolutely love your Video's. Keep it up.
@MrAPCProductions2 жыл бұрын
What you are dealing with in this one is very close to home for me. There are a lot of these 466e and 444 (powerstroke) local to me that I have spent a significant amount of time on. There are so many possibilities that its most likely multiple things, for example. Had a few Intertrashional 466 plow trucks that the engine harness would have salt and water intrusion in multiple spots in the wiring harness. Voltage from one inject might fire another or send cam signal to each injector simultaneously. Have seen the HPOP fail to supply the correct pressures from electrical (IPR) or mechanical (cracked heads, cracked injectors, or bad pump), All of the electronic control diesels have their own piles of unmitigated garbage that come along with them, save for the smaller cummins. The really redeeming factor for them is they weigh 1800-2500lbs, so at least you get a few sandwiches worth when you crush the trucks.
@jasonanderson49152 жыл бұрын
That sounds like a nightmare. Good to know that this sort of thing can happen....
@Bret42072 жыл бұрын
I don't know squat about electronic controlled diesels, but I know lots about salt corrosion living in Northern NYS. I was thinking it's corrosion down in all that wiring that's getting sprayed with salt water all winter long. I don't care how "waterproof" they make that ECM computer, I bet the inside is damp with salt water.
@shortchange262 жыл бұрын
Dude....you hit that nail square on the head. No pond is deep enough!
@jaybrown39532 жыл бұрын
9
@snidelywhiplash2852 жыл бұрын
I know someone who used to work at the International dealership just a few miles East of you. He always liked the DT466, but didn't like anything else about International trucks. He quit to maintain his sanity.
@The-Deadbolt-Deputy2 жыл бұрын
Wes , you are an amazing troubleshooter. This design seems over complicated. I assume that you get a lot of work that other folks couldn’t figure out. That’s a good reputation to have. Thanks for sharing
@vg34302 жыл бұрын
He didn’t fix anything. He “thinks” it “might” be the ECM. Exactly what did he troubleshoot?
@joehead12942 жыл бұрын
That type of work doesn't produce good profit. And profit keeps the doors open. At some point it begins to eat your lunch.
@nepicness2 жыл бұрын
@@vg3430 He's a helluva lot more capable than 98% of diy mechanics who, like myself, don't know the first thing about reading electrical signals and scopes. This result is a lot closer to the solution than most can do. Also he posts interesting stuff to youtube, not the stuff that makes the most money. Nobody wants to see a Camry's brake pads being replaced. He doesn't always win against the machines either. It's a bit of an accomplishment to be as capable as he is on so many different makes an models.
@michaelf.24492 жыл бұрын
@@vg3430 it might be the ECM aka it's probably ECM unless it has a short in the loom... All this breaks down to someone who's smart enough to understand you never guarantee a diagnosis if you can't test your solution and he knows he can't test the solution without a different ECM
@trevorvanbremen47182 жыл бұрын
Wes - Two things. 1: It _USED_ to work when there was an external battery charger connected 2: The 'spikes' are being seen on a large number of sensors IMO, that's almost SHOUTING at me that there's too much electrical resistance in a ground circuit somewhere. (Especially point #2 above) When ANY injector 'fires', it is 'lifting' the ground voltage to everything (INCLUDING the ECU itself) To test my hypothesis: Grab any semi decent old car battery with some long-ish leads (possibly 2 of them in series if the injectors require 24V) Connect the negative directly to the ECU ground leads (since the injectors are 'cold side' switched through the ECU) Cut the existing positive feeds to the injectors and connect them to the car battery positive You're now 'feeding' the injectors from a totally independent power source - the truck should run just fine. Now disconnect the external battery negative from the ECU and connect it instead to the actual truck battery negative right at the truck battery itself. If it fails now, then you definitely have too much resistance in your truck battery ground/negative circuit (which is what I suspect since so many sensors are affected) The other test would be to cut the injector feeds and directly connect them to the truck battery positive to check for resistance in the positive circuit, but I seriously doubt this is the problem.
@szabcsababcsa2 жыл бұрын
Well yes, it does scream ground fault, exept that it can carry hundreds of amps to crank the damn thing, also i belive towards the end of the video, wes says the ecm is directly grounded to the battery negative, and tested all ecm grounds with plenty of current. All i can see that he didnt (couldnt) test is if the high resistance was inside the ecm connector
@szabcsababcsa2 жыл бұрын
Thinking about it for a while now, the only reasonable cause i see, is that the power supply of the 5v reference, and the IDM use the same ground, and every time the injector fires it elevates the common ground level, and in response the 5v supply gets elevated compared to the rest of the ground plane. Most probably a crusty connector, or water damage inside the ECU itself. As to why it runs sometimes, and why it doesent, its probably down to some magix compensation from the confuser
@hordboy2 жыл бұрын
I bet the sensor reference ground in the ECU is smoked. Diode protected, somebody once hooked a battery charger up backwards, voila.
@justnsaliga85182 жыл бұрын
could be International and Ford's with the powerstrokes are known to have almost a bare minimum Electrical System and if the Medium duty trucks are anything like this Turd in the video.... likely grounds the whole engine and transmission through the Rear axel....... maybe if he Threw on a fat grounding cable it would work. or ground strap...... from the frame to the motor.
@justnsaliga85182 жыл бұрын
@@hordboy that or..... got a cheap ICP sensor with VREF and Data switched..... my 6.0l had that happen after i replaced the whole truck wiring harness... truck fired right up after the new ICP sensor....... couple weeks went by cranks started getting longer and longer and longer. then wouldn't start at all... Dug into it 4 hours of work....... cheap sensors are backwards somehow they WORK to begin with....... the 2 bottem pins are often switched from the plug on the truck i switched these around. Truck started right up havent had an issue since.... cheap amazon sensor i got for like 30 dollars...
@NeutronSplitter2 жыл бұрын
A good way to start the day with the word we all like to hear, "crusty"
@Rein_Ciarfella2 жыл бұрын
Actually, the words I like to hear are, “Howdy, folks”. 😁👍🔧🧰
@bostedtap83992 жыл бұрын
At least it wasn't snowing, I feel your pain. Love the WES CAD, excellent sketch. Thanks for sharing
@MiningCraftable2 жыл бұрын
Heui systems always do the weirdest stuff when old. Had a 6.0 power stroke once that had a complaint of oil gets too hot low power etc, but if an oil change is done that problem goes away and then slowly comes back. After a lot of head scratching and using a little parts swapping turns out the hpop was internally leaking, bypassing the oil cooler. But when you changed the oil the new additives sealed that leak for a little while. Most infuriating thing to figure out lol.
@codysp2 жыл бұрын
Your electrical diagnostic ability still blows my mind! Been watching you for years and definitely have learned a lot. Gave me the confidence to tackle a head gasket job on a 07 Ram 1500 with the poo-tastic 4.7L. Thanks for sharing your infinite wisdom!
@drivingmylifeaway71492 жыл бұрын
4.7 is way better then 5.7 hemi
@codysp2 жыл бұрын
@@drivingmylifeaway7149 lol! Words I've never heard anyone say...
@lmCIoudz2 жыл бұрын
4.7 is a great motor, you just can't do routine maintenance.
@codysp2 жыл бұрын
@@lmCIoudz not my rig smarty pants.🤣
@MrDrmorbid2 жыл бұрын
"Your", not "you are"
@saldesiderio34562 жыл бұрын
we used to have a fleet of 2004 4400 Internationals with the DT466E. They look nothing like what you have there. We would run into an issue with the engine having a long crank/no start due to a bad o ring where the oil rail meets the head under the valve cover. This would create a hard start, and if bad enough, a no start situation. Diag would be to disconnect the oil feed hose from the HPOP to the head, run a 150 psi to the fitting and watch drop off on the gauge as well as the ICP pid on the scan tool. if pressure fell off the cliff on the gauge, and the pid value was way off the supplied pressure, the o-ring shit the bed. I agree, this is a bad design, with multiple redesigns all the way up to the maxxforce engines. I have seen the screens on the IPR shattered, ICP failures, we even had an issue with the ecm being filled with oil, only guess is it traveled up the wiring as the outside of the ecm way dry. sorry see this one was a bust. Keep up the great content.
@joemaser91222 жыл бұрын
$$$$33³3
@chubbytx10422 жыл бұрын
Your right I didn't read your comment before I put the something lol icp ipr and o rings for the high pressure rail
@davidm87172 жыл бұрын
Your patience amazes me, of course I wouldn't be in business very long when I "sadly" report to the customer, I'm sorry there's been a fire and your rig burned to the ground. That would be more believable than someone stole this rig wouldn't it?
@ND321012 жыл бұрын
Big thanks for the work you put into these episodes Wes!
@Hey_Its_That_Guy2 жыл бұрын
Let's see there are bills to pay, laundry to do, a report that needs to be started, the truck needs fuel, and then there's the grocery shopping. Oh, thank [your deity of choice]! Wes just posted a video. Time to drop everything and watch it!
@mattnoyes77292 жыл бұрын
Oh thank goodness for that, i couldn't find anything to watch and was about to go sleep...thanks for the video Wes!!
@tikiman482 жыл бұрын
Those international trucks are complete nightmares. Nice job on this one
@heikovanderlaar37802 жыл бұрын
Great video despite no real resolution. Love this diagnostic stuff.
@deankruse87512 жыл бұрын
I spent the better part of the last week troubleshooting a low rail pressure and high rail pressure code on a cat C6.6 in a D6N. It was a huge pain in the ass to figure out. It would run fine at low load but when you pushed a full blade of dirt the rail pressure would be about 2000psi lower than desired and it would code. Then the rail pressure would get "stuck" about 5000psi higher than desired and set a hi pressure code. Got all the way through the cat troubleshooting guide with no fix. Finally tried a new injection pump and it runs better than new.
@deankruse87512 жыл бұрын
@@mmm365 well 9000 hours and poor maintenance history may have played a part in it
@deankruse87512 жыл бұрын
@@mmm365 on a small machine like a d6n it's a fair bit. More than half way through its life
@carltonlane89312 жыл бұрын
Over the pond,very little Huey systems,thank god,but a good diagnosis,thanks for the video.
@davidrocco45112 жыл бұрын
I ran into this many times working at Ryder Truck Rental. Injectors needed replaced.Internals were worn out inside Injectors and would not start after a cold soak.Once fired on ether would start all day.
@BG-vq9fd2 жыл бұрын
I respect your knowledge of how this stuff should work and you do not give up easily.
@bevanson2 жыл бұрын
Sounds like there’s an awful lot of people giving advice albeit well intentioned, in the comments, not sure how helpful that is for you Wes after you’ve worked on the truck. How can you find time to run a business, have a well adjusted family (with dog) produce videos, edit them and then read the comments? Hats off mate! I’m sad enough to procrastinate over all the things I’m supposed to be doing to watch your videos almost as soon as they are posted! I look forward to your productions and can even understand the technical side (well, sort of…) but marvel at your tenacity although your exasperation at times is palpable! 🇦🇺
@XCHANGEDAVE2 жыл бұрын
Nobody can say you don't try hard. What an awesome job you do.
@_BAD_MERC_2 жыл бұрын
Wes is the only mechanic I know that has a LightHouse to test for 12 volts.
@blake82972 жыл бұрын
I think Eric O showed us that.
@michaeldove54722 жыл бұрын
Wes- I really enjoy your diagnosing skills. I am also a mechanical engineer (retired) , I worked in the construction industry with large scale A/C & Heating systems so I can relate to what you are doing and you are doing one hell of a job. I wish I was close enough to you to bring some of my junk to you.
@firesurfer2 жыл бұрын
On behalf of Wes, think nothing of it, really. Keep your junk away from him. :)
@bobhudson66592 жыл бұрын
I am "sure" Wes would love to see your "little treasures". It is his missus you want to keep an eye on.
@roxanneabbott84242 жыл бұрын
Whether you fixed it or not, I love the way you walk us through your incredible thinking!!!
@mrsmith13392 жыл бұрын
We had a 2/12 ton truck in Viet Nam that was hard to start because it had no starter. We pushed it with a 5 ton dump. Yes it did run all day, or we were walking back. The Vietnamese got the new stuff, we got WWII 3/4 tons, and WWII C rations. We should have purchased a starter on the black market for 2 cartons of cigarettes. It would have been delivered in one day.
@MajorDan11382 жыл бұрын
Welcome Home, and Thank you for your service. My late father served in aviation twice there and one tour in Thailand, his last rotation with A/1/9 Cav. He passed away in 2004, so I kinda look at all Nam vets as Dad.
@Rob-eg7ur4 ай бұрын
Wes would have built a starter out of a walkie talkie 😅😂
@chrissterling32252 жыл бұрын
I've seen issues with starting these forever... numerous issues...high pressure pumps..warped oil rails..icp sensors or coils..cracked front structures..faulty fuel check valves,..corroded ecm and/or plugs..etc . In the fleet of 40 of these treasures I was blessed to work on for 8 years...I think only one had a bad ecm . Without a good diagnostic laptop it's hard to pinpoint...ours was ok but always needed updates ...it was in for repairs more than the trucks were lol . One thing comes to mind..you mentioned it starts when cold...if it has issues once warm.. I've seen faulty icp valves..or the orings on it bad . But one of the first areas of concern for me is the wiring plugs going to the ecm...those o rings are so thin they only have one side lol . I've seen water get in them and corrode many times..a thorough cleaning is often the solution .
@Ghettochappy2 жыл бұрын
Oh man,New videos by watch Wes work,salvage workshop AND diesel Creek all in an hour! What a treat 🙏 thank you
@HODGEPODGEDODGEGARAGE2 жыл бұрын
You have *WAAAY* more patience than all of us! I would have been pulling out my hair in clumps Wes. Hats off to you for trying your best to figure it out. That truck needs parted out! LOL 😂 Take care my friend 🙂👍
@ZookeeperJohnG2 жыл бұрын
Wes, this is actually fairly common and the symptoms overlap a number of possible causes, some of the more common are: 1) Low/no oil in the HPOP reservoir, 2) Low ACTUAL ICP during cranking (sensors LIE), 3) Make sure you get 35ish psi of fuel pressure at cranking and if not Inspect the check-ball in the fuel strainer and the regulator on the return fitting if EFP is low or rises slowly. Lastly, the HPOP must be force-fed by engine oil pressure. It's not the ECM, or at least I'm saying it's not ;)
@78moneypit Жыл бұрын
My 466 had no start condition code was cam sensor bad it turned out to be a green corroded connector on the ecm cleaned it with deox cleaner and a brush and packed it with dielectric grease and that fixed it.
@SNIPERevo223 Жыл бұрын
@zookeeperJohnG. I agree. have worked on 20+ of these all with either HP oil leaks or fuel prime issues.
@theekidd20532 жыл бұрын
Hi Wes thanks for taking us along, you’ve definitely got the patience of a saint! Is it just me why can’t we keep things simple you know like the good old days of mechanical timing and mechanical injection pumps no frigin computers or sensors, maybe I’m just getting old and crusty.
@Ryan-dz3jo2 жыл бұрын
Trouble is ECM faults have the same hysteresis as common electrical faults but we learn to usually trust the ecm data because of a lower failure rate. Nice work in trusting your diagnosis.
@apex-td5th2 жыл бұрын
After watching your work on the International makes me feel nostalgic for the old Roosa Master injection pumps. I give you credit, when it comes to diagnosis you are like a cross dog with a bone. Never give up never give in.
@warrantyvoid1002 жыл бұрын
Thank you Wes! Best mechanic content on KZbin!
@alecmccance84092 жыл бұрын
Wes, you must have the patience of Job, how on earth do you get to the bottom of these problems, I doff my cap to you my friend, you're an inspiration, trying to explain to a customer the amount of your time spent diagnosing, must be difficult.
@gregquante88642 жыл бұрын
Really enjoy your diagnostic explanations and the graphics you draw.
@wyllie49612 жыл бұрын
Pull the ECU and start replacing leaky Caps, clean up the board, always great to watch the channel, great content and diagnostics.
@virtuestreams26162 жыл бұрын
“Here’s the part that’s gonna bake your noodle”: this is my favorite Wesism of the video. 😂🤣😂👍❤️🔧
@Billy-m8l11 ай бұрын
I'm a mechanic of 35+years,worked on everything from chain saws to excavators, diagnostics wont make you rich but you always have a job.great approach.
@dthetruckguy14992 жыл бұрын
Enjoyed the video Wes. I don’t have too much experience on the older 466e models. But from what I have seen on all older internationals, is the ecm power and ground weather pack connectors are notorious for having high resistance due to spread terminals. This will cause a hard start issue and ecm power down issue. There should be 3 weatherpack connections, one at the battery box, one by the starter, and one by the firewall (driver side). I know you checked the powers and grounds at the ecm with a test light. But to verify whether these ecm powers and grounds are the problem, what I would do is, before starting the truck, after a 48hr cold soak. Back probe the ecm connector at the powers and grounds like you had them. And see if you have sufficient enough voltage and a good ground with the key on and while cranking. You can even supply your own power and ground while cranking to see if this is your issue. Also do you think that you have a parasitic draw on your batteries that could be causing a ecm power down the longer it sits?
@sloppystooly5439 Жыл бұрын
Fyi, rewatching because the knowledge of all machines is never enough and your videos are extremely educational and entertaining! Keep it goin Wes
@garyberray68382 жыл бұрын
I can tell you we had a newer model that would not start. We changed the oil and it would start right up. The oil was getting thinned with fuel and it would not build pressure. Ended up pulling the injectors replacing the o-rings and the pucks that seal the injectors to the rail. Found a bad o-ring letting fuel into oil. You can put a pressure gauge on to check the fuel pressure and high pressure oil. Be interesting to see if an oil change makes it any better or not. Yes the wiring sucks on these things.
@yako00002 жыл бұрын
that's interesting and good to know
@deweydodo66912 жыл бұрын
Ding Ding Ding ?
@bertjetolberg1032 жыл бұрын
That could also be the answer why it fires up perfect when cold In my opinion if it starts Well when cold and doesnt when warm you can forget about the electronics
@WeeShoeyDugless2 жыл бұрын
@@bertjetolberg103 But the truck didnt start when cold if left for 48hrs........
@n8inc924 Жыл бұрын
Being honest, binge watching my man Wes a night or two a week makes me Leary of ever owning another automobile. I’m getting a horse
@RVJimD2 жыл бұрын
I would love to hear what they decide to do and if the problem was eventually solved. Nice video, thanks!
@warrenmichael9182 жыл бұрын
its a township truck, they wont spend the money to fix it, i bet they will buy a case of starting fluid and toss it in the cab LOL
@thehulkamaniabrother2.0892 жыл бұрын
Michael yep is Vernon township lolz
@warrenmichael9182 жыл бұрын
@@thehulkamaniabrother2.089 haha, you can substitute almost any township name in there and expect the same answer when it comes to spending money !! LOL
@thehulkamaniabrother2.0892 жыл бұрын
@@warrenmichael918 that's because the money is going into someone's pocket before it gets spent on a new truck...
@WeeShoeyDugless2 жыл бұрын
@@thehulkamaniabrother2.089 Oh, so the States is the same as the UK then? 🥴🥴🤣🤣
@samb37062 жыл бұрын
I really admire how your engineering education is applied to real world problems, and results in practical solutions. I am, however, disappointed in that you have become well known because of your ability to repair rusty heaps of junk that get deposited on your doorstep. I just marvel at what you could do with modern, good condition equipment that had serious technical problems.
@pinwizz692 жыл бұрын
Wes, it seems to me you've been issued a permanent pass ticket to the struggle bus. Front row seat with a 500 pound gorilla between you and whatever item you're trying to diagnose. But we have faith in you Wes, we know the next episode in the Wes Struggle Bus our intrepid Wes will achieve success over the engine Gremlins and be victorious. The celebrations shall be glorious ✨️ 🙌 😀
@ncplantdoctor2 жыл бұрын
You deserve a thumbs up for the title of the video alone. Addicted to ether. Great.
@charlie4187912 жыл бұрын
Your perseverance is 2nd to none , ya magnificent trouble-shootin bastard ! Have a great weekend my friend. 👍 🍺
@gsxrinfrance58272 жыл бұрын
Way back in the early '60's I worked in a truck garage as an apprentice, during the winter months I had to go around starting trucks using "Easy Start" an ether based product, and there was no doubt once you used it on a truck regularly it got addicted to it and wouldn't start without it. We had to supply the drivers with a tin or two of the stuff because when they were away from base they needed it ...
@warrenmichael9182 жыл бұрын
Wes you are a good mechanic but your diagnostic skills and explanation of what you are doing and looking for are just top notch. There are good mechanics all over the place but what you are doing is much more than just a mechanic. Great stuff on this channel as usual.
@bikefarmtaiwan18002 жыл бұрын
Sitting on a sunny mountainside in Asia on a Sunday morning marveling at your skills ! CNC to large diesels and seemingly everything in between . The videos are awesome - you are a true master of your skills.
@robinwright23002 жыл бұрын
Wes, i totally agree with the placement of the engine control module. Completely buried behind all kinds of things. It would help my feelings to get a punch into the face of the genius that designed it.
@Anthony-xn7mh2 жыл бұрын
Boy do I admire your patience! Long before you gave up I would have been roasting hotdogs over an International grill with a roaring diesel fuel fire. Back in the days when I worked on junk and far from the complicated level of junk you diagnose I kept an old car rim with a sledge hammer next to it...my pressure relief valve so that when things were going like the IHC I would beat the Hell out of the rim, I found that was cheaper than destroying whatever I was working on.
@Shawnsullivan72 жыл бұрын
Hit that ecm with a hair dryer when it’s cold and see if it fires up before you call it. I’d also check the alternator and make sure your not getting any alternating current out of it messing with the ecm.
@RODALCO20072 жыл бұрын
Great diagnostic. What a pain of a design to work on and try to find a fault. Can't beat the old mechanical high pressure fuel pumps on older diesel engines. Very reliable and work after years of not being used.
@terrypomatto9072 жыл бұрын
Wes one thing that you have to remember, the design engineers don't work on the equipment that they design. They are only interested in the power lines going where they think it should be going. You are striking for Sainthood but the customer isn't going to understand what you have to do to trouble shoot a problem.
@richardcranium58392 жыл бұрын
but the ecm is right in the open on the test stand lol
@henryD93632 жыл бұрын
That's a terrible practice that a lot of automobile companies have. The engineers never have to work on their products. I think the engineers should have to spend a week per year in a repair shop before they actually get to design new products.
@dfross872 жыл бұрын
@@henryD9363 A fortnight every 3 months. I've worked somewhere that had that rule (not for design engineers, but for the bosses). Drag someone on $200k+ out of their comfy office and tell them to stack empty pallets in the rain in the middle of winter and suddenly we all got new wet weather gear. Or hand unload trucks in 40°C -- suddenly there's plenty of cold drinks being delivered on a regular basis.
@jimmystuckey14122 жыл бұрын
Have a 3126 in a fl70 that was a bear to start when cold. Similar to this one and had no throttle response for a while. Pulled the valve cover and cranked it one day and had 3 injectors not squirting oil. Let it warm up and reved it and 2 started dumping oil. On a budget so I replaced 1 injector and she starts great now. As far as I can tell the 3 non functional injectors wasn't letting it build injector oil pressure
@jacquejecker44352 жыл бұрын
Your understanding of electronics and the control circuits in the modern engines astounds me. This one was a real stumper and the worst part is that we will probably never know if the computer is what finally fixes it. I love watching both you and South Main Auto for the depth of diagnostics you guys go to, and your explanations of the circuits.
@johnblake38632 жыл бұрын
I hung in with you the whole way. Didn't understand a lot but your shared thinking helped a lot. I enjoy your problem solving skills and actually over the time of this video I began to understand a lot more. It stayed interesting for me right up to the end so you are doing something right. Thanks. I look forward to the next one, Wes!
@HarmonyHollowApiary2 жыл бұрын
2 minutes into the video my first thought was "Worn injectors" needing a rebuild - or shimming of the poppet plates. Same symptoms on my '01 7.3 F250.... But computer - good diagnosis.... Glad you isolated it - whether or not the customer can/wants to get a new one.
@SammyFender2 жыл бұрын
I never worked in one of them but I drove them for over 20 years til I talked management into buying Peterbuilts. I spent many hours on the roadside or at the garage watching others fix the stupid things! Great video!!
@m35a2ww2 жыл бұрын
HEUI was a CAT invention. Navistar USED to take power and grounds from the starter lugs. That caused a ton of issues, ask JB Hunt.
@1903bretep2 жыл бұрын
Wes, that was brilliant, I didn't understand a word of your carefully reasoned arguments but it's obvious you know what you are talking about which is why I watch you !
@burtoncummins89702 жыл бұрын
Morning Wes love watching your channel your the man you can get anything working. It my take a time or two, but you don't give up. Have a bless weekend and prayers for your family and your dog
@nicolasstanley13922 жыл бұрын
someday I hope to have your patience and thorough problem solving abilities. you are a smart, smart man
@devisionhun2 жыл бұрын
Oh wow… it would be super interesting to see what went bad in the ECM. I had a car ECM “rebuilt” or repaired where it only had the start issue once it was hot. They found it by hairdrying the ECM, got it all re-soldered and it’s been good for years now. I guess internal wiring for these are highly confidential, but it would be awesome to see what broke or grounds internally for these spikes to appear. Or maybe blowing some heat on the ECM before cold-starting could prove that heat in it provides the workaround… Perplexing for sure, thanks for filming it!
@michaelf.24492 жыл бұрын
You want an answer? All you got to do is connect someone like buildzoid he breaks down board views of video cards and odds are he could figure it out, also look up gentry & sons trucking on KZbin they recently did a video with a man repaired ECU for semi's awesome shit.
@nsaglian2 жыл бұрын
Great video, Wes! Love the "notebook talk" segment! What a frustrating POS!
@davecc00002 жыл бұрын
In the area of your concern (fuel sensor, valve; injectors) I would do an ohms check between all wires (after unplugging all connectors). As was mentioned, possible salt incursion might be making a low-ohms path between circuits that are supposed to be isolated. Also, check ohms of each of those connectors (point-to-point), including grounds. I bet you'll find either low ohms where there shouldn't be, or high ohms where there should be zero ohms. Also do voltage drop test (using scope) for ground and power at the ECM while cranking. Some of the above has been suggested by others here in the comments.
@peterre44222 жыл бұрын
I didn’t understand a whole lot of that. Wiring a plug and an on-line food shop are the extent of my electrical and computer skills, but I’m mighty impressed by your diagnostic skills and the presentation makes it very watchable. I am amazed at some of the junk you manage to keep on the road. In the UK most of your projects would have been scrapped years ago.
@nevadak2 жыл бұрын
Ivan would click his headlamp off and say "we have an interesting case study here. "
@coltonkruse23132 жыл бұрын
Wes I had an international 9400i I bought for super cheap when I started driving over the road for myself. Had it for 3 years. Whooooo doggy you aren't wrong. Everything on them is just HARD to work on. Also surprise surprise I had random electrical issues all the time because their harnesses are god awful. 3 years of constant repairs. The head gasket was starting to go so I took it back to the auction. Have had a freight liner for awhile now. AMAZINGLY easy to work on in comparison. Love the content and trouble shooting. you do one hell of a job to find answers on stuff.
@Trains-With-Shane2 жыл бұрын
The real crazy thing is what changes after ~48 hours that hasn't changed already in ~24 hours? Could it be a very slow capacitor drain in the ECU? Because any pressure related systems surely would have leaked down or de-pressurized within the first 24.
@seano512 жыл бұрын
Yeah, that's what I'm thinking. Bad cap on the circuit board.
@flir67man842 жыл бұрын
somethings on the circuit board causing that.. gentry and sons just found a guy who can reprogram these computer chips.. he has advanced motherboard machines
@MattExzy2 жыл бұрын
I just came down in the comments looking to see where I could throw my hat in for the 'bad cap' theory. Those spikes look to be a signal that maybe should otherwise be smoothed out by a capacitor. Besides that, maybe one has just puked its guts out and also playing havoc with actual traces on the board, shorting things out and making spurious signals internally. I wish it was being replaced though, I'd love to see the actual innards of it.
@JVerschueren2 жыл бұрын
Would a bad cap get better by getting hot, though? -there's also the long delay before it acts up again. It's not going to get any colder sitting more than 6 hours or so. Only thing I can think of is leaky semiconductors in the driver circuits... that has similar symptoms in automation, where, e.g., machines act up the first couple hours after having been off for the weekend. Seen that a couple of times and each time it was the interface circuitry between the 5V logic and the actual machinery.
@Troy_Built2 жыл бұрын
We just sent one of the ECUs on a big truck into Cardone to rebuild it. Not because we wanted to but couldn't find anyone else who would touch it.
@MrAvfc142 жыл бұрын
I worked on these type of trucks for N.Y.S that were used on the 90 interstate. The ECM wire connectors use to get pin corrosion from plowing and salting. I did many replacement pins in the connectors and somethings you had to just cut out the connector and reconnect each pair of wires individually. Salt kills wires.
@nashsmith30052 жыл бұрын
I really enjoy the electrical diagnostic videos. I find them fascinating! Thanks for the great entertainment and education!👍
@MrDrmorbid2 жыл бұрын
I mostly came here to see all the posts from people that don't know the difference between "your" and "you're". I wasn't disappointed.
@stjohnschurchcolumbus2 жыл бұрын
Wes your deductive skills are right on, better than my engineer new hires. I have watched all your videos even the early ones. Very impressed. Gery Bauman BSWE.
@45AMT2 жыл бұрын
I really liked the detailed review on paper. The reasons why it needed an ECM. Great video. Thanks!
@coryantrim85852 жыл бұрын
Great video Wes! I seem to remember a while back( I thought it was your channel but maybe not so I'll mention it) I saw a video where a guy had one of these with same type situation and it was caused by oil draining out of the little reservoir they have in the front timeing cover that supplies oil to that high pressure pump up front.
@doughubble35782 жыл бұрын
My favorite KZbin channel. Informative and entertaining.
@patrickhill87482 жыл бұрын
That was amazing!! Very interesting and you do a fantastic job explaining everything. Can’t wait for the next ones!!
@trimforspeed2 жыл бұрын
Hey Wes, your diagnostic skills are great! I appreciate your explanations of what you are doing. What really impresses me though is your handwriting. Well drawn diagrams and clear, legibal cursive handwriting. Those skills are less common then your diagnostic skills.
@ericmann83472 жыл бұрын
Wes - you are oh so close! The most likely problem is excessive resistance at the connector to the PCM ... you won't see the voltage drop when back-probing pins but there will be a voltage difference across the PCM connector which will be proportional to PCM current (in your case, probably from injector current). This will cause the PCM ground to be "lifted" with respect to chassis ground. When you disconnected and reconnected the PCM (and added dialectric grease?) you probably "cleaned" the connector contacts to a degree. If the problem is still present, you may be able to remove one of the PCM ground wires (cut, etc) and monitor the voltage on the PCM side of that wire ... I'm sure you'll see the voltage drop mentioned. Alternatively, if you were to unhook (cut off) 3 of the 6 injectors, you should see the lifted ground voltage reduce (as measured by the "lifting" of your measured waveforms from what should be ground on your scope). What I believe is happening is as current flows you're getting a voltage difference between PCM ground and chassis ground. Your back-probing proved the chassis grounds are ok, but your voltage waveforms indicate the PCM ground is "lifting" because of the darn voltage across the connectors - the degree of lifting should be proportional to PCM current. If the grounds are grouped together (they are probably not) you could run all of them through your current probe and you'll see a current waveform synchronous "lifted" waveforms you've observed. You could also probably measure the current on the supply side of the PCM. BTW - I'm an electrical engineer who designs microcontrollers for PCMs, ECU's, and other controllers. Sometimes we see OEM's undersize their ground wires during design which cause similar (and interesting to diagnose) problems ... once you've been around the block a time or two - particularly with erratic sensor readings - you become aware of this issue. Your keen intuition, experience, and creativity (including methodical diagnosis) is appreciated as are your efforts to entertain us with your work!
@brucetuckey79092 жыл бұрын
Wes, I can teel you one of my customer's paid an International dealer $600 dollars to hook up there magic book to their truck and told them of the fuse problem above the batteries. One fuse being power to the ECM. They didn't carry any thing to fix it with them but were willing to wasting 6 hours running back to the shop to maybe getting parts to fix it. Customer called me and I cut out those fuses and installed butt connectors. Another one of my customer just had bought a 4400 IHC from a fuel company. they carried a jump pack to get it started. I did the same with that one and it hasn't been a problem since.
@malware_in_tn90082 жыл бұрын
This reminds me of an old video Eric O did about silver migration in the instrument panel of older Chevys causing similar weirdness. Makes me wonder if the same thing is happening inside of the PCM and starting to cause tiny shorts. Tiny shorts are only desirable on hot girls. Not on guys, and especially not on trucks.
@craigsmith82172 жыл бұрын
I hope you are well paid for your excellent diagnostic skills.
@richb4192 жыл бұрын
Hi Wes, as an old electronics tech we found that some times adding heat or cold to the device would cause it to change states. try heating with a heat gun to see if anything changes, if so freeze spray and try again. Rich
@eddygoodwin70892 жыл бұрын
Sounds like that would work to me, since once it runs and drives for bit it will start right up.
@WatchWesWork2 жыл бұрын
I don't know it it's temperature related. It restarted fine after 24 hours.
@richb4192 жыл бұрын
@@WatchWesWork what I meant was you could heat specific parts, like the computer. connectors and sensors one at a time and try to start. Good luck Rich
@giggiddy2 жыл бұрын
What is freeze spray?
@anthonydefreitas60062 жыл бұрын
@@giggiddy Plumbers use freeze spray to temporary stop flow on a pipe.
@jimlong5272 жыл бұрын
You got the best examples of repairs that no one wants to repair. Go see Wes he likes this stuff.
@dfross872 жыл бұрын
More like, "Go see Wes, his viewers like this stuff." I don't think Wes really enjoys it.
@eformance2 жыл бұрын
The fuel delivery is a function of injector pulsewidth and oil pressure. The injector is a 7:1 intensifier pump, so at 3000psi oil pressure you reach 21000psi injection pressure. From what I've seen on my 7.3 the computer tries to keep the injectors at 2-4ms and increases oil pressure to get additional fuel mass flow as RPM and boost rises.
@ericw31882 жыл бұрын
I so wish you were local to me, fighting electrical gremlins on my truck pulling my hair out knowing there’s something stupid going on but not wanting to take it to someone who’s just going to start blasting the parts cannon at it is quite a struggle. Love your content as always
@jonathansperb2 жыл бұрын
The hump you are seeing is probably voltage drop on the ground wires/connections. Depending where you connect your scope ground it will measure the voltage drop of some wires. As the injectors need a substantial amount of current, they will give you the biggest voltage drop. When you disconnect the injectors you don't have the high current peaks anymore and no voltage drops either. Maybe you could use your current clamp to check the wires that carry the injector currents from battery to the ecu and reinforce those wires for lower resistance and lower voltage drop. Or You could use the scope to measure the voltage drops on power and grounds on the ecu. That would be better than using the light bulb probe. Maybe if you change your scope ground to the ecu you eliminate your voltage drop measurements and that would help identify the no start issue. That is my guess.
@silasmarner75862 жыл бұрын
Good advice, sir!
@ScottHenion2 жыл бұрын
Yes, looks like ground issues. ECU has bad ground so it is pulling current through sensor grounds. Test lights are not good for testing grounds especially with an ECU. Internally the ECU connects them together. One can be open and the light will show a ground as it runs through the ECU to a working ground. Unplugging the ECU and testing powers and grounds will show valid information.
@elanman6082 жыл бұрын
I was tending toward an earth issue as well, most likely a dodgy chassis earth somewhere on the block. My next step would be to Megger each earth but that would require disconnecting the ecu so I think Wes has got as far as can be done without committing to an ecu replacement.
@thehulkamaniabrother2.0892 жыл бұрын
@@elanman608 what does megger mean?
@edwardromana2 жыл бұрын
@@thehulkamaniabrother2.089 A Megger is a brand name for a high, very high, resistance tester. It is used to test insulator effectiveness. It subjects the insulator under test to high voltages, typically 100s to 1000s (and up) Volts while measuring micro Amps of leakage, resulting in effective measurements in the 1000 mega ohm range.
@belesiu2 жыл бұрын
I love that you sketch out the problem on green engineering paper! I’m an EE and this brought me back to my college electrical fundamentals classes (I which I suspect you took as well).