derekja
06-24-2008, 18:52
I think I'm having turbo problems. Here's the sequence of events. I have gauges in the truck, so where I give boost pressure that's where it's from.
The truck has always tended not to give me any boost when the engine is cold. I presumed that to have been a computer setting or something, but the failure events lead me to wonder if something else is going on.
Three days ago, I drove the truck for about an hour and didn't see any boost pressure at all on the gauge until I drove up a big hill and all of a sudden boost came on to about 5 psi. Prior to that I heard some roaring that I couldn't completely identify (sounded almost like the fan engaging, but louder and a bit different timber, and, of course, the engine was cold, so I wouldn't have expected the fan to be engaged, although it had been sitting in the direct sun.) Driving home boost pressure was normal (again 5 psi.)
Today, a similar thing happened. I headed out, engine cold, and climbed a big hill and had no boost. Didn't hear the roaring of the other day. Warmed up and eventually the boost pressure came up to it's normal 5 psi max. Got to where I was going, parked a while, unloaded, and headed home. No boost, even on a warm engine. I was also getting black smoke going up a steep hill, where I would definitely have expected to see good boost pressure.
Oh, I should mention that each time the boost has come on it has been when I was giving it pretty hard up a hill, then after that it seems to react normally, giving me boost when I'm just normally accelerating. Also, no check engine light. I'll get carcode down when I go get the manuals from the storage locker tonight and double check that no codes are being thrown.
Coincidentally, I have just received a TD max boost controller from Kennedy, but it is still in it's box and I'm not going to mess with that until I'm convinced that the stock system is working right.
I'm going to read the turbo chapter in the helms manual tonight, but please let me know what you think about the following lines of investigation:
1) waste gate - check vacuum pressure and free movement, but I don't think the wastegate would have led to the initial roaring and I can't see how it could be temperature related. Still, this sounds like the part that fails most frequently.
2) turbo fan free play - not sure quite how to check this, but I've heard it mentioned and the manual will tell me
3) turbo oil line - I mean, I know it's attached! But that's the one that seems most likely to be heat related - gets hotter, the oil gets thinner, eventually the turbo starts spinning freely. Or, like today, it doesn't.
Oh joy, another learning experience. Thoughts are welcome.
Thanks.
The truck has always tended not to give me any boost when the engine is cold. I presumed that to have been a computer setting or something, but the failure events lead me to wonder if something else is going on.
Three days ago, I drove the truck for about an hour and didn't see any boost pressure at all on the gauge until I drove up a big hill and all of a sudden boost came on to about 5 psi. Prior to that I heard some roaring that I couldn't completely identify (sounded almost like the fan engaging, but louder and a bit different timber, and, of course, the engine was cold, so I wouldn't have expected the fan to be engaged, although it had been sitting in the direct sun.) Driving home boost pressure was normal (again 5 psi.)
Today, a similar thing happened. I headed out, engine cold, and climbed a big hill and had no boost. Didn't hear the roaring of the other day. Warmed up and eventually the boost pressure came up to it's normal 5 psi max. Got to where I was going, parked a while, unloaded, and headed home. No boost, even on a warm engine. I was also getting black smoke going up a steep hill, where I would definitely have expected to see good boost pressure.
Oh, I should mention that each time the boost has come on it has been when I was giving it pretty hard up a hill, then after that it seems to react normally, giving me boost when I'm just normally accelerating. Also, no check engine light. I'll get carcode down when I go get the manuals from the storage locker tonight and double check that no codes are being thrown.
Coincidentally, I have just received a TD max boost controller from Kennedy, but it is still in it's box and I'm not going to mess with that until I'm convinced that the stock system is working right.
I'm going to read the turbo chapter in the helms manual tonight, but please let me know what you think about the following lines of investigation:
1) waste gate - check vacuum pressure and free movement, but I don't think the wastegate would have led to the initial roaring and I can't see how it could be temperature related. Still, this sounds like the part that fails most frequently.
2) turbo fan free play - not sure quite how to check this, but I've heard it mentioned and the manual will tell me
3) turbo oil line - I mean, I know it's attached! But that's the one that seems most likely to be heat related - gets hotter, the oil gets thinner, eventually the turbo starts spinning freely. Or, like today, it doesn't.
Oh joy, another learning experience. Thoughts are welcome.
Thanks.