ccurran
06-13-2008, 07:34
I have a 2005 2500HD DMax with ~38k on it. A little more than year ago (May/07) it started what I can best describe as a "rough idle" problem. What I'm calling a "rough idle" is this: Sitting in PARK, the engine is running real rough - as if a plug wire or two is missing from a gas engine. The truck is physically shaking/rocking from side to side. To visualize, the tip of the radio antenna is moving back/forth six to eight inches. If you go back to the exhaust, it sounds like it's under water (those of you who visit boat ramps will know the sound - glug-blub-glug-blub - it's not how a normal running engine sounds). No obvious black/blue smoke.
Conditions:
1. Cold start: sometimes the truck would start/run fine on cold startup, other times it would start, but idle real rough (as above).
2. After driving at hwy speeds (~60mph) when pulling my travel trailer (~6k lbs). I would pull off the interstate and once I stopped at the ramp the truck would start jumping/bumping as above.
These two conditions started off as rarely happening, progressing to darn near all the time by Nov/07. The dealer first replaced the fuel filter (at my cost), when that didn't fix it flush injectors (at my cost), then they did some wiring harnesses work, egr swapped, new flash to the truck computer, injectors swapped, etc (all warranty). None of this fixed it. Note that all this time misfire codes were being thrown.
By Sept/Oct 07 the truck would fall into this rough idle problem after normal in-town driving with no load. Drive around until it warmed up, pull up to a stop sign/light and hang on - it felt like you were on a bucking bronco. One issue that has compounded this is that (of course) the truck never exhibited this problem at the dealer. I do understand that it's darn near impossible to diagnose a problem you can't witness...
By Nov/07 I had found a condition that I could repeat at will: drive around a little until the truck warmed up and it would develop a very slight rough idle when at a stop light or in park. If I "gunned" the engine at that time, it would kick the truck into the violent shaking/jumping as described above. With this new found knowledge I went to the dealer, sat in the service bay and repeat the problem. The darn truck was about to walk away sitting in park it was running so rough.
I grabbed the (one) diesel tech they had and brought him out to the truck (while in the rough idle state). To paraphrase, he didn't know what the problem was, he'd already changed out whatever parts GM would allow him to, and further speculated that it was my motor mounts. I've seen broken motor mounts - no freaking way. He wouldn't hook any device to the truck to help determine what was going on - come back next week I was told. Having purchased three trucks and a Tahoe from this dealer, I was very disappointed that I was turned away with an obvious and serious problem.
Later that day I'm driving through a parking lot and the truck shuts down. DEAD. It'll crank, but no start. Fuel is pouring on the ground. I'm not a mechanic, but even I know that's not good. I have the truck towed to the nearest dealer (not the one I've been going to) and they find that the fuel filter gasket has been blown out. They put on a new filter, replace a water in fuel sensor, and send me on my way.
The truck runs fine for about a week, then the faint rumblings of that rough idle start to show up. Very slight and rare at first, but it has progressed along the same lines as above. It's getting worse, and more frequent. I very much suspect that whatever blew that fuel filter out last time is coming back at me and I can't afford to have it happen when I'm 300 miles from help.
Someone else tells me that the water separator is leaking air, the leak got so bad that it finally blew the fuel filter out. But it's all greek to me...
I could use help with 1) what the heck this problem might be, but more importantly, 2) a diesel tech in the Tampa/Brandon FL area that I can take this creature to. I've lost faith in the local dealer, and need a mechanic that will do more than plug up a computer to my truck. I need a mechanic that will go looking for a vacuum leak, or a manifold leak, or whatever the heck is going on here.
tia,
Chris Curran
BTW: 100% stock.
Conditions:
1. Cold start: sometimes the truck would start/run fine on cold startup, other times it would start, but idle real rough (as above).
2. After driving at hwy speeds (~60mph) when pulling my travel trailer (~6k lbs). I would pull off the interstate and once I stopped at the ramp the truck would start jumping/bumping as above.
These two conditions started off as rarely happening, progressing to darn near all the time by Nov/07. The dealer first replaced the fuel filter (at my cost), when that didn't fix it flush injectors (at my cost), then they did some wiring harnesses work, egr swapped, new flash to the truck computer, injectors swapped, etc (all warranty). None of this fixed it. Note that all this time misfire codes were being thrown.
By Sept/Oct 07 the truck would fall into this rough idle problem after normal in-town driving with no load. Drive around until it warmed up, pull up to a stop sign/light and hang on - it felt like you were on a bucking bronco. One issue that has compounded this is that (of course) the truck never exhibited this problem at the dealer. I do understand that it's darn near impossible to diagnose a problem you can't witness...
By Nov/07 I had found a condition that I could repeat at will: drive around a little until the truck warmed up and it would develop a very slight rough idle when at a stop light or in park. If I "gunned" the engine at that time, it would kick the truck into the violent shaking/jumping as described above. With this new found knowledge I went to the dealer, sat in the service bay and repeat the problem. The darn truck was about to walk away sitting in park it was running so rough.
I grabbed the (one) diesel tech they had and brought him out to the truck (while in the rough idle state). To paraphrase, he didn't know what the problem was, he'd already changed out whatever parts GM would allow him to, and further speculated that it was my motor mounts. I've seen broken motor mounts - no freaking way. He wouldn't hook any device to the truck to help determine what was going on - come back next week I was told. Having purchased three trucks and a Tahoe from this dealer, I was very disappointed that I was turned away with an obvious and serious problem.
Later that day I'm driving through a parking lot and the truck shuts down. DEAD. It'll crank, but no start. Fuel is pouring on the ground. I'm not a mechanic, but even I know that's not good. I have the truck towed to the nearest dealer (not the one I've been going to) and they find that the fuel filter gasket has been blown out. They put on a new filter, replace a water in fuel sensor, and send me on my way.
The truck runs fine for about a week, then the faint rumblings of that rough idle start to show up. Very slight and rare at first, but it has progressed along the same lines as above. It's getting worse, and more frequent. I very much suspect that whatever blew that fuel filter out last time is coming back at me and I can't afford to have it happen when I'm 300 miles from help.
Someone else tells me that the water separator is leaking air, the leak got so bad that it finally blew the fuel filter out. But it's all greek to me...
I could use help with 1) what the heck this problem might be, but more importantly, 2) a diesel tech in the Tampa/Brandon FL area that I can take this creature to. I've lost faith in the local dealer, and need a mechanic that will do more than plug up a computer to my truck. I need a mechanic that will go looking for a vacuum leak, or a manifold leak, or whatever the heck is going on here.
tia,
Chris Curran
BTW: 100% stock.