Really need help !!!! Please help !!
#11
Have a look when you pull it, if there is any obvious damage.... well, it's damaged....
Trouble is, the aftermarket parts just don't do very well in critical locations on our trucks. Crank Position sensor most certainly qualifies as "critical". They may work fine one day, and fail completely (or anything in between) the next. Too many failure modes to list.
Swap it out, see if it fixes it, if it doesn't, we can go from there.
Trouble is, the aftermarket parts just don't do very well in critical locations on our trucks. Crank Position sensor most certainly qualifies as "critical". They may work fine one day, and fail completely (or anything in between) the next. Too many failure modes to list.
Swap it out, see if it fixes it, if it doesn't, we can go from there.
#12
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#17
A clogged cat gives you backpressure, which causes some interesting problems. Backpressure, in any form, is bad.
To hollow it out, remove the pre-cat O2 sensor, cut/otherwise remove the pipe from right behind the cat. Poke in there with a sharp, pointy, STRONG stick, that is long enough to do the job. Use a hammer to pound it in if necessary. Break up the substrate in there as much as you can. (wear a dust mask too....) if you can scrape it out, do so, once done there, start the engine, and rap on it a couple times to blow some more of the crap out. Lather, rinse, repeat, until you have it all out. Re-install pre-cat O2, use a sleeve to put the pipes back together, or, if you have the stuff, weld it back up.
TPS won't necessarily throw a code. If the signal voltage back to the pcm is erratic, it interprets that as you just having a nervous foot on the gas. To check it, need to either be able to read the data on a scan tool, or, measure output voltage at the signal wire from the tps. Should start low, less than, or very close to.. 1 volt, and rise STEADILY as you open the throttle, to some value greater than 3.5 volts. Not sure if a parts store scan tool would be good enough, but, worth a shot if you don't have an ANALOG! volt meter.
To hollow it out, remove the pre-cat O2 sensor, cut/otherwise remove the pipe from right behind the cat. Poke in there with a sharp, pointy, STRONG stick, that is long enough to do the job. Use a hammer to pound it in if necessary. Break up the substrate in there as much as you can. (wear a dust mask too....) if you can scrape it out, do so, once done there, start the engine, and rap on it a couple times to blow some more of the crap out. Lather, rinse, repeat, until you have it all out. Re-install pre-cat O2, use a sleeve to put the pipes back together, or, if you have the stuff, weld it back up.
TPS won't necessarily throw a code. If the signal voltage back to the pcm is erratic, it interprets that as you just having a nervous foot on the gas. To check it, need to either be able to read the data on a scan tool, or, measure output voltage at the signal wire from the tps. Should start low, less than, or very close to.. 1 volt, and rise STEADILY as you open the throttle, to some value greater than 3.5 volts. Not sure if a parts store scan tool would be good enough, but, worth a shot if you don't have an ANALOG! volt meter.
#18
#19
You are correct on the code, which is going to cause the truck to run a bit rich. If having it out doesn't make that much difference, disconnect the battery for a few minutes to reset the PCM, and put it back. Take it for a drive, and see if with everything in place it doesn't feel better.
#20
Ok thank you tons !! I hope this doesnt boil down to a internal engine problem. When I floor it it cuts out for like 3 seconds like it stopped breathing almost. Then pops and sputters and makes loud popping sounds. When I put it in drive it sorta lunges back n forth a little bit like the truck is rocking. Do you still think the cat is clogged. Also looked at the cat and the metal is turning blue like its been real hot or something ?