rapidoxidationman
06-28-2015, 18:45
Related?
Three days ago I got the check engine light on the dash. A quick check with Torque showed that a P0381 code had been thrown (glow plug/heater indicator circuit). Cleared the code, it came back with the next startup and I also noted that the glow plug indicator doesn't come on with a cold start - not that it is cold in the mornings here, but I should still see it for a second or two even when it is 60 degrees. The glow plug controller was replaced on 10 March 2014, about 20,000 miles ago.
Yesterday I fired up the A/C (which had worked well the day before) and was met with air the same temperature as what was outside: 80 or so degrees. Bummer. Turned on the 260 air conditioner backup (2 windows down, 60mph) and sucked it up. Today I took a look under the hood and noted the compressor clutch is not grabbing, but the light on the A/C button on the climate control system does light up. I pulled the connector at the compressor clutch, stuck a test light into both sockets and was met with darkness - no power to the clutch. Put a test guage on the low pressure side of the A/C system, and it wound the guage all the way up tight - no need to add refrigerant.
So. What to do? I'll be taking the multi wire harness off the glow plug controller and ohming out each plug but it was my understanding that the controller will throw a plug-specific code if one fails. I'll also make sure that a solid connection exists for the main power lead into the controller.
I need ideas on the A/C. Any odd chance that the two issues are somehow related? What else should I be checking that is in the way of power getting to the compressor clutch? It's predicted to be in the 90's this week...
Edit: searched "P0381" and read both threads that came up.
Edit, 20 minutes later: I checked the glow plug controller: Circuit A (power from the battery) is fine - a solid battery voltage for that main line in. Circuit B, I checked what I could... All the glow plugs (pins 1-4 and 7-10). Plugs 1-7 are all solid at 1.5 ohms each. Plug number 8 is high at 8 ohms. Pin #11 (ground) is good. I don't know the proper method for testing pin #5 (ignition voltage), maybe someone could enlighten me... Pins # 6 and 12 are the serial data bus and I kept my cotton pickin' meter out of them cuz it seemed appropriate.
Would a single glow plug going bad (#8) cause the whole glow controller system to shut down without throwing a plug specific code?
Three days ago I got the check engine light on the dash. A quick check with Torque showed that a P0381 code had been thrown (glow plug/heater indicator circuit). Cleared the code, it came back with the next startup and I also noted that the glow plug indicator doesn't come on with a cold start - not that it is cold in the mornings here, but I should still see it for a second or two even when it is 60 degrees. The glow plug controller was replaced on 10 March 2014, about 20,000 miles ago.
Yesterday I fired up the A/C (which had worked well the day before) and was met with air the same temperature as what was outside: 80 or so degrees. Bummer. Turned on the 260 air conditioner backup (2 windows down, 60mph) and sucked it up. Today I took a look under the hood and noted the compressor clutch is not grabbing, but the light on the A/C button on the climate control system does light up. I pulled the connector at the compressor clutch, stuck a test light into both sockets and was met with darkness - no power to the clutch. Put a test guage on the low pressure side of the A/C system, and it wound the guage all the way up tight - no need to add refrigerant.
So. What to do? I'll be taking the multi wire harness off the glow plug controller and ohming out each plug but it was my understanding that the controller will throw a plug-specific code if one fails. I'll also make sure that a solid connection exists for the main power lead into the controller.
I need ideas on the A/C. Any odd chance that the two issues are somehow related? What else should I be checking that is in the way of power getting to the compressor clutch? It's predicted to be in the 90's this week...
Edit: searched "P0381" and read both threads that came up.
Edit, 20 minutes later: I checked the glow plug controller: Circuit A (power from the battery) is fine - a solid battery voltage for that main line in. Circuit B, I checked what I could... All the glow plugs (pins 1-4 and 7-10). Plugs 1-7 are all solid at 1.5 ohms each. Plug number 8 is high at 8 ohms. Pin #11 (ground) is good. I don't know the proper method for testing pin #5 (ignition voltage), maybe someone could enlighten me... Pins # 6 and 12 are the serial data bus and I kept my cotton pickin' meter out of them cuz it seemed appropriate.
Would a single glow plug going bad (#8) cause the whole glow controller system to shut down without throwing a plug specific code?